Aug-16-2020 03:27 PM
Aug-17-2020 07:47 PM
Aug-17-2020 07:46 PM
Gdetrailer wrote:
While I have mentioned that, I have run into a pretty persistent bunch of folks here that always continually point out that there is no need to specifically state how the extra money is to be applied. They insist it is done automatically (which is not always the case, but you can't argue with them).
Aug-17-2020 07:36 PM
wanderingbob wrote:
As stated above , making extra payments is wrong , you make a payment and also enclose a check and a note stating you are making a " payment on the principal " also .
Aug-17-2020 06:06 PM
wanderingbob wrote:
As stated above , making extra payments is wrong , you make a payment and also enclose a check and a note stating you are making a " payment on the principal " also .
Aug-17-2020 05:56 PM
Aug-17-2020 05:47 PM
DownTheAvenue wrote:
....snip....
Check your contract with the bank regarding early pay offs, and discuss with the bank how to handle extra payments. Without care on your part, those extra payments will be applied to future monthly due payments, and although you pay the loan off early, you will pay all the interest as if you paid for the whole term. Sometimes it is just better to make the minimum monthly payment and save up extra money to make a one time large payment to pay off the loan. You can cost yourself many thousands of dollars if you don't do this right.
Aug-17-2020 02:35 PM
RobWNY wrote:
You have to make sure you have enough other deductions to itemize. The standard deduction is so much now, most people can't. If you're discussing a 15 year note for 23K you likely are in the standard deduction category and wouldn't be able to write off a 2nd mortgage for an RV
Aug-17-2020 11:29 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:elwood58 wrote:
Whatever you decide, if you are not already writing off a second home, the RV interest is deductible so long as it has a galley and bathroom.
Meh.
In reality, the interest deduction on a $23K loan for 12 yrs is peanuts.
You are talking a mere $1,083.33 reduction in your tax liability per yr average ($13K interest paid for the life of the loan) keeping in mind I have simplified it for explanation.
What does that mean to you?
if you have say $50K of income it reduces it by $1K or now your income looks like $49K..
You might overall see a few dollars less in your taxes once you run all the numbers.
Not going to even see that blip on the radar.
Now a $100K-$200K motorhome, you most likely will see some tax benefits but that isn't the reason you bought it.
Keeping in mind I have simplified things to illustrate, in reality the first 2/3 of the loan you are paying more interest on the loan than you are paying down the Principle (what you borrowed). So the first 2/3 of the loan you could see some tax liability reduction and the last 1/3 you will see nearly nothing.
Amortization calculators are your friend and will show just how much interest you will pay each month and how much you will pay towards the Principle borrowed per month.
Aug-17-2020 10:23 AM
thomasmnile wrote:+1 Just not a big deal really.
Had a 15 year loan (dealer finance through Bank of America Specialty Vehicles), 4.99 simple interest. Paid it off in 7 years, didn't have to make arrangements, seek permission or anything. The additional payment each month was applied to principal,the scheduled payment had the interest taken out of it. Final payment I made was the payoff balance I obtained from B of A, and just like a car loan that figure was good for 10 days. Everything ended happily ever after.
Aug-17-2020 10:15 AM
Aug-17-2020 10:01 AM
SlothHorn wrote:
I've noticed that my credit union only extends out to 8 years or so. I just clicked on the GoodSam financing table. The max for a $23K trailer is 12 years @ 8.49%.
Note: We have near-perfect credit and can put $ down if that makes a difference.
I understand that financing works differently with an RV due to its designation as a luxury item; however, it's surprising that I'm not seeing any options.
Aug-17-2020 09:40 AM
DownTheAvenue wrote:Raife wrote:
We just purchased our travel trailer and got a much better rate than that. We shopped around for a couple lenders, got preapproved through our bank and the dealer was able to get a another .25% off. We financed for 144 months to get the interest rate (longer term = lower rate), put a sizable down payment, and will be sending in almost double the scheduled payment amount. We will end up paying the loan off in ~5 years as opposed to 12 years.
Check your contract with the bank regarding early pay offs, and discuss with the bank how to handle extra payments. Without care on your part, those extra payments will be applied to future monthly due payments, and although you pay the loan off early, you will pay all the interest as if you paid for the whole term. Sometimes it is just better to make the minimum monthly payment and save up extra money to make a one time large payment to pay off the loan. You can cost yourself many thousands of dollars if you don't do this right.
Aug-17-2020 09:30 AM
elwood58 wrote:
Whatever you decide, if you are not already writing off a second home, the RV interest is deductible so long as it has a galley and bathroom.
Aug-17-2020 09:23 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:I was in banking for many years, most of it in at the executive level in consumer lending. I don't think it would even take all the fingers on one hand to count all the repossessions where we broke even. On top of that, a little known provision in the law requires the lender to return to the borrower any proceeds of a repossession sale that exceeds the balance on the loan. So even if you have paid your Newell down to a $25.00 balance when we repossess it and then we sell it for $500,000 we had to write you a check for the difference, less fees and that pesky $25.00 balance. On top of that, we had to document how we arrived at that sale figure, which is why almost all repossessions are sold at auction. That way no borrower could claim we gave a sweetheart deal to an insider.wapiticountry wrote:
Small loans are likely to viewed more as a nuisance than an opportunity. It costs the lender the same amount of money to process a $20,000 loan as it does a $200,000 one. Therefore the actual costs of $20,000 loans are ten times higher than $200,000 ones from the lender's point of view. If I was underwriting an RV loan, I would be very concerned that someone wanted to get a 15 year loan on such a low balance. It would raise a red flag that the borrower had cash flow issues.
Not really.
Take into consideration that banks use the property that you are buying as collateral. Collateral assures the bank that if you default on the loan that they WILL take ownership of the property and resale it to get the loan paid.
Homes on average gain value over time provided you do upkeep.
RVs even with up keep lose value over time, banks are less interested in a asset which loses value..
They are taking chances with RVs and the longer the note, the better chance that if you default they are stuck with a unwanted RV that they will have a difficult time reselling and most likely result in loss of banks money..
Short loan terms under 12yrs on depreciating assets banks will not bat an eye at.
Aug-17-2020 08:10 AM
DownTheAvenue wrote:Raife wrote:
We just purchased our travel trailer and got a much better rate than that. We shopped around for a couple lenders, got preapproved through our bank and the dealer was able to get a another .25% off. We financed for 144 months to get the interest rate (longer term = lower rate), put a sizable down payment, and will be sending in almost double the scheduled payment amount. We will end up paying the loan off in ~5 years as opposed to 12 years.
Check your contract with the bank regarding early pay offs, and discuss with the bank how to handle extra payments. Without care on your part, those extra payments will be applied to future monthly due payments, and although you pay the loan off early, you will pay all the interest as if you paid for the whole term. Sometimes it is just better to make the minimum monthly payment and save up extra money to make a one time large payment to pay off the loan. You can cost yourself many thousands of dollars if you don't do this right.