garnigal: (Default)
[personal profile] garnigal
I've been looking forward to today for a month. Turns out it sucks.

We accepted an offer on the townhouse in early December. We'd been carrying 2 places for 6 months, so even though it was ten grand less than our previously agreed upon lowest price, it seemed like a decent deal. And really, it is. It's in line with other prices in the condo development, just 10 grand lower because of the market.

Anyway, today is the closing. We were supposed to have enough to pay back my mom the money she loaned us as a down payment on the new place (essentially a home equity loan) with a little ($500 or so) left over. Basically, today was our fresh start - debts zeroed out, money in the bank.

Except I forgot something in my calculations - penalty for paying off the mortgage.

The mortgage company finally sent the payout today - $9300 in penalties. We were figuring about $103,000 to the mortgage company, but with the penalties, it's $112,000ish. Which means we are $9000 short on Mom. Which means we still have debt and there's nothing left over.

I just keep reminding myself that we did make money on the house. We did get the house we wanted (and we'll never have to sell and move again). Our loan is to Mom, so we've got flexible repayment terms.

It's just not how I was hoping today would go.

Date: 2009-01-06 07:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] whatawookie.livejournal.com
Is the mortgage with the same people? If it is not, then you are probably screwed up the ass... they have no obligation to reduce your penalities. If it is, I'd be threatening to move to a different company because that is a shit-tastic way to treat a customer.

Date: 2009-01-06 08:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] maes.livejournal.com
No, we changed to a real mortgage company instead of this horrible extortionist company. They did not give us favourable rates in any way before and their exorbitant rates are actually the reason why our penalty is so high. The break fee is the difference between their rate and the Canada Savings Bond rate on the day the mortgage gets paid down... not the prime rate, not the CSB rate when the mortgage was renegotiated...

I hope they rot in hell.

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