An interest-only mortgage is a mortgage in which the mortgage-holder is only required to make interest payments each month on the sum originally borrowed. The capital sum, which is the initial sum lent by the financial institution, is not repaid until the term of the mortgage is up. In a typical mortgage, the monthly payments cover both interest on the initial debt and the capital sum itself. Naturally enough, as the capital debt is progressively paid enough, the interest on what remains would be gradually reduced. Therefore, over the full term of a mortgage, the interest payments required on an interest-only mortgage would be higher than those required on a more conventional mortgage.
The monthly payments, however, will on average be lower because there is no need to immediately repay the capital debt. The capital debt must eventually be paid off, however. At the end of the mortgage term, the mortgage owner must have sufficient funds on hand to repay his/her loans. Usually, interest-only mortgages appeal to those who are financially-constrained in the short to medium term and would have difficulty in meeting the higher monthly repayments on a normal mortgage, but who expect their financial situation to improve in future.
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