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  GLOSSARY OF TERMS

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The mortgage business, like so many others, has its own special language - one that can be very confusing.  while it can seem tedious, understanding this language is critical to you as a borrower.  By familiarizing yourself with mortgage terminology, you'll gain a better understanding of how home loans work, and the features and options you should choose when you arrange your mortgage.

Here is a glossary of some of the more common mortgage terms and definitions.

Term

Definition

Amortization: This refers to the number of years needed to fully repay a loan.   Most mortgages are amortized over 25 years.  This means that buy making the set monthly payments - each blend of interest costs and repayment of the original principal - you'll have paid back the original amount and all the interest in 25 years.   You can , however, chose different amortization periods.  A shorter amortization, 15 or 20 years for example, will mean higher monthly payments, but significantly lower interest cost.
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Assumable Mortgage: A loan that lets a new buyer of a home take over the existing mortgage, sometimes (although increasingly rarely) without having to qualify for the loan.
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Balance: The amount of the loan owing or outstanding at any time.
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Closed Mortgage: A conventional mortgage in which the interest rate is fixed for a set term with no right to repay the loan in advance.
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Conventional Mortgage: A traditional mortgage for up to 75 percent of the appraised value of a property.
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Convertible Mortgage: A mortgage that gives the borrower the flexibility to change from a short-term to a longer-term mortgage if it seems advantageous to do so - for example, when interest rates appear to have hit bottom.
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Fixed Rate Mortgage: With this type of mortgage, the interest rate is set at a specific level for a certain term ranging from six months to fives years or more.
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High-ratio Mortgage: A mortgage for more than 75 percent of the appraised value of a property.   Usually high-ratio mortgages have to be insured against default by the borrower.
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Interest: The charge paid by the borrower to the lender for the use of the principal.
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Mortgage: This refers to a special type of loan used to buy property.  With a mortgage, a home buyer borrows money from a lender, using the property that is being purchased with the money as security on the loan.
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Mortgagee: The lender.
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Mortgagor: The borrower.
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Open Mortgage: Allows the borrower to pay off, renew or refinance as much of the outstanding balance as desired, without penalty, at any time.
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Principal: The amount initially borrowed from the lender.
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Term: The term of a mortgage is its life, usually from 6 months to 5 years.   Think of it as the length of the contract you have entered into with your lender.   When the term is up, the deal is finished, and you are technically supposed to give the money you've borrowed back.  In practice, however, you simply renegotiate another mortgage for the outstanding balance at the current rate of interest.  While many people do this almost automatically with their current lender, you are free to approach any financial institution for your next mortgage, once you present term has expired.
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Terms vs. Amortization: It is easy to confuse these words, but they are very different.   Let's look at a typical mortgage - one that is amortized over 25 years with a 3-year term.  What this means is that your payments will be calculated as if you planned on taking 25 years to repay the loan.  However, after 3 years of making those payments, your mortgage matures.  At that point, you get a new mortgage, either with the same lender or a different financial institution.  Your new mortgage should be amortized over 22 years, because when you renew, the amortization should never be greater than the original amortized period, minus the number of years of mortgage payments you've already got under your belt.

Remember that once your term has expired, you can put together a totally different mortgage at a different rate - and with a different lender if you wish.

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Variable-rate Mortgage: A variable-rate mortgage means the interest rate changes monthly - depending on interest rates in financial markets.  Payments on a variable-rate mortgage generally do not rise and fall.  If interest rates go down, more of the monthly payment goes to pay off the principal; if rates go up, more money goes towards paying the interest charges.  If rates rise substantially, you could end up owing more than you borrowed in the first place.
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Vendor-take-back Mortgage: When a seller helps a buyer finance the purchase of the seller's property by taking a mortgage, usually what is called a second mortgage.
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