Right from the get-go, I’m going to ask those of you who already know this to forgive me for stating the obvious. Minimum payments benefit the lender way, way, way more than they benefit the borrower.

Beware the minimum payment!

When you borrow money from the lender, you’re taking out a loan. And when you do so, you’re agreeing to pay interest on the money borrowed. The loan is governed by a contract, so the very best time to amend the terms of the contract – and thereby the terms of the loan – is before you sign the contract!!! In other words, don’t take a loan if you don’t believe that the terms of the loan will be beneficial to you.

The repayment terms of the loan are set out in the contract. If you don’t like them, or the lender won’t change them, then don’t take the loan. This is the most effective way for you to avoid having repayment terms in your life that may cause you financial grief in the future.

And for those wondering how to buy what you want without a loan, the answer is that you will require a combination of cash and patience. Save up your money then make the purchase. You’ll get what you want. You won’t pay any interest. It’s the ideal situation so strive to make it your reality.

However, there are times when you simply need to borrow money to get what it is that you want. If this is the situation in which you find yourself, then I want you to be very aware of the trap of minimum payments.

Making minimum payments benefits the lender because they can charge you interest on the outstanding loan balance for the longest period of time. If you take out a 5-year car payment, then the loan is structured so that the lender earns as much interest as possible off the loan. In other words, you as the borrower will pay back the maximum amount of interest.

The legal way to minimize the amount of interest you re-pay on the loan is to make extra payments. Get a second job – sell some stuff online – cut some subscriptions from your life. However you choose to find extra money is up to you. The bottom line is that you take that extra money and apply it to your outstanding loan. Go back to the car loan for a hot minute. If you can make extra payments on the loan and pay it off in 2 years instead of 5, then you will keep three years of interest payments in your pocket rather than sling that money into your lender’s pocket.

As of the date of publishing this blog post, the banks in Canada are allowing mortgage holders to apply for a six-month deferral of their mortgage payments. If approved, people who have mortgages won’t have to make mortgage payments for six months. It’s called a mortgage deferral.

This deferral means that the people who took out a mortgage will have to repay the money, eventually. (I’m not an expert on how the program works. If you need the details, please contact your bank.)

Make no mistake. The banks want their money back. The banks lent the money to borrowers at an agreed-upon rate of interest for an agreed-upon period of time. That the banks are allowing borrowers to defer repayments on their mortgages is quite unprecedented in my experience. What I wonder is whether the borrowers understand that a deferral of their mortgage payment is not the same as a waiver. The deferred payments are still outstanding. And borrowers will continue to owe interest on those payments until the money is repaid to the lender.

Again, the banks want their money back. So if a borrower receives a deferral from their bank, the borrower still has to repay that money. And guess what? Interest will continue to accrue on that deferred payment.

What? Are you surprised? Did you think that the banks would stop the interest clock from running? If so, gently hit yourself on the head with a hammer. Of course, the banks are going to continue to charge interest on their loans.

This is not a debate about the morality of the banks during the COVID19 pandemic. What I want to impart in this post is that the second best option is to get out of debt as fast as possible. Minimum payments are not your friends. In the case of a mortgage, the numbers are a lot bigger so a deferral is going to mean a much higher amount of interest will be charged during the deferral period.

If you’re considering applying for a mortgage deferral, keep the following in mind. A deferral means that the money is not being paid back as agreed upon in the loan. It does not mean that the money remains outstanding without interest being charged by the lender.

Allow me to state this concept another way. The interest only stops accruing when the loan is repaid. Paying later means paying more interest. The only way to avoid the interest charge is to repay the loan.

Beware the minimum payment! It never benefits the borrower.

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Weekly Tip: Once you’ve finished making debt payments to a lender, continue making those same payments to yourself. Re-direct your former debt payments to a high interest savings account. You were living without the money when you had a debt, so continue to live without that money when the debt is gone.