Google AI
The Times Australia
The Times World News

.

You can't beat the bank by paying $1 a day extra on your mortgage. Here's how compound interest really works

  • Written by: Sagarika Mishra, Associate professor, Deakin University
You can't beat the bank by paying $1 a day extra on your mortgage. Here's how compound interest really works

By paying just $1 a day extra on your mortgage, you can hack the banking system and cut the time to repay your home loan from 20 years to just five years.

Sounds too good to be true? Of course it is. But that hasn’t stopped someone “good at finance” from claiming this in a TikTok video that’s garnered millions of views and spurred dozens of other “finfluencers” to amplify its claims.

The best way to get attention on social media is to make sensational claims. TikTok[1]

According to the video: “The reason banks want you to pay interest monthly is because they rely on a thing called compound interest.” But if you pay the bank $1 every day you “will pay a big fat zero in interest”.

The video goes on to say “mortgage” is a Latin word, and the reason “they” stopped teaching Latin in schools is because “they” don’t want people understanding how the banking system works.

If this sounds like a conspiracy theory, it’s because it is. Like all conspiracy theories, this one is a falsehood built on a few grains of truth, taking advantage of people’s ignorance about complicated matters.

So let’s separate the facts from the fiction.

What is compound interest?

Compound interest, in a nutshell, is interest on interest.

Say you put $1,000 in a savings account that pays 10% interest. After the first year, you would have $1,100 ($1,000 + $100 in interest). At the end of the second year you will have $1,210 ($1,100 + $110 in interest). At the end of the third year you will have $1,331 (1,210 + $121 in interest). The interest compounds.

What if you’ve borrowed $1,000 at a 10% annual interest rate? Assuming you make no repayments, after one year you will owe $1,100 ($1,000 + $100 in interest), after two years $1,210 ($1,100 + $110 in interest), and after three years $1,331 ($1,210 + $121 in interest). Again, the interest compounds.

How to avoid compound interest

To minimise the amount of compound interest you pay, there is one effective strategy: pay off the loan as quickly as you can.

Let’s consider an example similar to the scenario mentioned in the TikTok video – a mortgage with a loan term of 20 years. To make the maths easy, let’s say the loan is for $500,000 with a 5% interest rate. To pay it off in the allotted time will require monthly repayments of about $3,300 – or $39,600 a year.

Over 20 years you will pay about $792,000 – with about $291,950 being interest. The following graph shows this.

Now let’s consider what would happen if, instead of paying $3,300 a month, you paid $1,650 a fortnight. At first glance that might seem like the same thing, but it isn’t.

In a year there are 12 months, but 26 fortnights (because only February is exactly four weeks’ long). Paying half your monthly repayment every fortnight will mean you pay $42,900 a year, instead of $39,600.

If you can afford to do that, it will take just 17 years and six months to repay the loan, and you will pay about $41,750 less interest. The following graph illustrates this.

So what about paying daily?

Paying more frequently, such as weekly or daily, won’t make any difference unless you’re paying more.

There’s no magic trick to stopping compound interest. The following graph shows what an extra $1 a day would achieve with our hypothetical $500,000 loan.

Rather than taking 20 years to repay the loan, it will take 19 years and nine months. You would save about $5,470 in interest (paying about $286,480 rather than $291,950).

To repay the loan in five years, as claimed, would require paying an extra $201 a day – or about $113,220 a year instead of $39,600.

There are no secret hacks

So there’s no magic hack to avoid compound interest.

There are strategies to improve your loan conditions, such as refinancing when interest rates are declining, or using an offset account facility where these are offered.

The only real way to minimise compound interest on your mortgage is to pay off what you owe as quickly as you can.

But before you do, check with your bank if there are fees involved if you make additional payments towards your home loan.

For instance, if you have a partially or fully fixed mortgage, there may be a limit on how much extra you’re allowed to pay off each year without penalty.

These penalties are intended to compensate the bank for the loss of interest income it would have received if the borrower had continued to make regular payments over the full loan term.

References

  1. ^ TikTok (www.tiktok.com)

Read more https://theconversation.com/you-cant-beat-the-bank-by-paying-1-a-day-extra-on-your-mortgage-heres-how-compound-interest-really-works-202838

Times Magazine

Federal Budget and Motoring: Luxury Car Tax, Fuel Excise and the Cost of Driving in Australia

For millions of Australians, the Federal Budget is not an abstract economic document discussed onl...

Buying a New Car: Insider Tips

Buying a new car is one of the largest purchases many Australians make outside buying a home. Yet ...

Hybrid Vehicles: What Is a Hybrid, an EV and a Plug-In Hybrid?

Australia’s car market is changing faster than at any point since the decline of the local Holden ...

Chinese Cars: If You Are Not Willing to Risk Buying One, What Are the Current Affordable Petrol Alternatives

For years Australian motorists shopping for an affordable new car generally looked toward familiar...

Australia’s East Coast Braces for Wet Week as Weather Pattern Shifts

Large sections of Australia’s east coast are preparing for a significant period of wet weather as ...

A Report From France: The Mood of a Nation

France occupies a unique place in the global imagination. To many outsiders, it remains the land ...

The Times Features

Where Our Batteries Come From: Battery making is big bu…

Batteries are now so deeply embedded in modern life that most people rarely stop to think about th...

Did Trump Secure China’s Assistance to Protect Middle E…

As tensions in the Middle East continue to threaten global energy markets, a new geopolitical ques...

China and America: Trump Tried to Be Nice. Did It Work?

For years the relationship between the United States and China has resembled a slow-moving collisi...

Since the Budget: How the Real Estate Industry Reacted

Australia’s real estate industry has reacted to the federal budget with a mixture of optimism, cau...

Budget Holidays in Australia: How to Travel More and Sp…

For many Australians, the idea of a holiday now comes with a difficult question: can we still affo...

Street Side Medics Calls for Canberra Clinic Volunteers

Street Side Medics – a not-for-profit, GP-led mobile medical service dedicated to people experienc...

How Can Beginners Stay Motivated After Joining a Gym?

Starting a fitness journey is an exciting step, but staying consistent can be challenging for many...

MARIAM SEDDIQ UNVEILS “ECHOES” AT AUSTRALIAN FASHION WE…

At Australian Fashion Week 2026, MARIAM SEDDIQ will unveil “ECHOES”: a collection that exists in the...

The MOST SPECTACULAR NIGHT ON THE HARBOUR is COMING …

Sydney is set to witness a defining cultural moment this winter as The Jackson Sydney presents an ex...