Mort gauge

I hear people say things all the time like, โ€œIf you get a 30-year mortgage, you pay more in interest than the house cost!โ€

NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO.

Wrong.

If you get a 30-year mortgage, in a stable monetary environment, the value of a particular dollar deflates over time, so that each year you pay progressively less relative to your starting year.

Iโ€™m explaining this poorly. The 1st year of your mortgage, your 2018 dollar is worth about the same as your 2017 dollar. Just a little less. But your 2027 dollar is worth a lot less than your 2017 dollar. Yet, you still pay the same amount to the mortgage company. They donโ€™t raise the payment (in a standard fixed-interest loan). And generally, salaries at least keep pace with inflation, as do house prices.

In other words, you are giving less valuable dollars of the same absolute amount (say, $800 a month) to the mortgage company while you make more and your house is worth more relative to those fixed payments.

If you actually do the math on a 30-year mortgage vs. inflation, and you include housing price rises and a few other minor factors, the cost of a mortgage (the interest) should roughly equal these numbers โ€” in other words, you โ€œreallyโ€ pay roughly zero interest over timeโ€ฆ.

By the way, this is why itโ€™s not always to your advantage to pre-pay a mortgage especially.

Donโ€™t believe it when you hear someone say, โ€œYou paid more in interest than you paid for the house.โ€

Itโ€™s only true if you donโ€™t understand a damn thing about anything.