Variable vs Fixed rate mortgage

zeroshiki
Veteran
Posts: 853
Joined: Thu May 27, 2021 3:11 am

Variable vs Fixed rate mortgage

Post by zeroshiki »

Hey guys, so I'm not really looking to buy a house yet but its fun to dream so I've been reading up about the various things that go into getting a mortgage here.
One major thing is the age old discussion regarding variable rate vs fixed rate mortgage and one common conclusion I've read from Japanese blogs and youtubers is that variable makes the most sense because the rate going up above what banks offer for fixed rate is so unlikely to happen and that even if it did, you could theoretically move to fixed anyway.

I thought that made the most sense and put it in my head that if I ever bought a house I'd go with variable and swallow the risk because of how unlikely it would be to go up that significanly. However, one wrinkle that I discovered has to do with the mortgage tax credit. As most of the people in this forum probably know, the government offers 1% of the loan balance at the end of the year as a tax credit. This means that if you have a 30M yen loan balance during December, you can write off 300k yen from your taxes effectively erasing the interest payments and actually MAKING money back (in this case you paid 170k or so in interest on your loan). This goes on for 10 years which is a long time. Now here is the wrinkle. I've read that the government has actually commented that because interest rates on mortgages are so low (< 1%) it doesn't make sense to give a tax credit above what you've actually paid in interest so there is a proposal (not confirmed) starting 2022 that the tax credit is 1% of your loan balance (max 400k a year) OR the total interest payments you've made for the year. In the example above, instead of getting a 300k tax credit, you get 170k which leaves you out the free 130k you used to get.

This actually changes the variable vs fixed argument quite a bit because in this case there is no difference going for a 0.5% variable mortgage vs a 1% fixed mortgage since the tax credit erases the interest payment on both equally. You'll basically be carrying the risk of the variable mortgage going up for literally no gain for 10 years.

Curious what everyone thinks. There's a bunch of links regarding the new tax break system but here's one: https://kakakumag.com/money/?id=16421

Money quote:
借入金利が控除率の1%を下回っているということは、毎年の住宅ローン控除額が、ローンの支払利息額を上回っている可能性があることを意味します。この結果、十分な資金がある人が本来は必要がない住宅ローンを組んだり、減税の適用期間中は繰り上げ返済をしなかったりするケースにもつながり、そのことを会計検査院が問題視したのです。今回の与党税制改正大綱では、最終的に控除率は変更されませんでしたが、「控除額や控除率の在り方を令和4年度(2022年度)税制改正において見直すものとする」と明記されました。

つまり、2022年度税制改正の議論の行方によっては、2022年以降に住宅ローン減税の適用を受ける場合、「1%」と「借入金利」のどちらか数字の低いほうが控除額となる可能性も否定できません。これから住宅を購入する予定がある人は、現状の節税効果を受けられるうちに、入居を検討してみるのもひとつの選択肢になるでしょう。
Teflon
Veteran
Posts: 139
Joined: Sun Mar 28, 2021 3:52 am
Location: Tokyo

Re: Variable vs Fixed rate mortgage

Post by Teflon »

I bought a new "manshon" last year and I was surprised that with the mortgage tax credit it actually covered all of my interest payments plus property tax payment for 2020 with money left over. That would be unheard of in the US! Also, I don't have PR yet so my options were more limited. I ended up getting a variable rate 35 year mortgage at 0.8% from Prestia and they required a 20% down payment. With PR you can get 0.5% variable and 100% financing so I will probably refinance after getting PR.

I'm not worried about interest rate hikes considering that 50% of Japan's tax revenue is spent on servicing the debt and a mere doubling of the interest rate would mean insolvency for the government. As such, I expect that the interest rate on short-term JGBs will likely continue to be negative or as close to zero as possible with longer-term rates only slightly above zero for the foreseeable future.

Thanks for sharing the link about the proposed modification to the mortgage tax credit. Obviously that would be a bummer if it passes but I would still be paying substantially less on servicing my loan than anything available in the US right now. I don't really see that changing the argument for variable vs fixed since the credit is only for 10 years anyway so on a 35 year mortgage you'd still be paying the higher fixed rate for 25 years vs the likely much lower variable rate.
Wales4rugbyWC23
Veteran
Posts: 418
Joined: Mon Sep 16, 2019 1:30 am
Location: Fukuoka

Re: Variable vs Fixed rate mortgage

Post by Wales4rugbyWC23 »

zeroshiki wrote: Sat Jun 19, 2021 2:48 pm Hey guys, so I'm not really looking to buy a house yet but its fun to dream so I've been reading up about the various things that go into getting a mortgage here.
One major thing is the age old discussion regarding variable rate vs fixed rate mortgage and one common conclusion I've read from Japanese blogs and youtubers is that variable makes the most sense because the rate going up above what banks offer for fixed rate is so unlikely to happen and that even if it did, you could theoretically move to fixed anyway.

I thought that made the most sense and put it in my head that if I ever bought a house I'd go with variable and swallow the risk because of how unlikely it would be to go up that significanly. However, one wrinkle that I discovered has to do with the mortgage tax credit. As most of the people in this forum probably know, the government offers 1% of the loan balance at the end of the year as a tax credit. This means that if you have a 30M yen loan balance during December, you can write off 300k yen from your taxes effectively erasing the interest payments and actually MAKING money back (in this case you paid 170k or so in interest on your loan). This goes on for 10 years which is a long time. Now here is the wrinkle. I've read that the government has actually commented that because interest rates on mortgages are so low (< 1%) it doesn't make sense to give a tax credit above what you've actually paid in interest so there is a proposal (not confirmed) starting 2022 that the tax credit is 1% of your loan balance (max 400k a year) OR the total interest payments you've made for the year. In the example above, instead of getting a 300k tax credit, you get 170k which leaves you out the free 130k you used to get.

This actually changes the variable vs fixed argument quite a bit because in this case there is no difference going for a 0.5% variable mortgage vs a 1% fixed mortgage since the tax credit erases the interest payment on both equally. You'll basically be carrying the risk of the variable mortgage going up for literally no gain for 10 years.

Curious what everyone thinks. There's a bunch of links regarding the new tax break system but here's one: https://kakakumag.com/money/?id=16421

Money quote:
借入金利が控除率の1%を下回っているということは、毎年の住宅ローン控除額が、ローンの支払利息額を上回っている可能性があることを意味します。この結果、十分な資金がある人が本来は必要がない住宅ローンを組んだり、減税の適用期間中は繰り上げ返済をしなかったりするケースにもつながり、そのことを会計検査院が問題視したのです。今回の与党税制改正大綱では、最終的に控除率は変更されませんでしたが、「控除額や控除率の在り方を令和4年度(2022年度)税制改正において見直すものとする」と明記されました。

つまり、2022年度税制改正の議論の行方によっては、2022年以降に住宅ローン減税の適用を受ける場合、「1%」と「借入金利」のどちらか数字の低いほうが控除額となる可能性も否定できません。これから住宅を購入する予定がある人は、現状の節税効果を受けられるうちに、入居を検討してみるのもひとつの選択肢になるでしょう。
When they increased the Sales tax the mortgage tax credit was extended from ten years to thirteen years. Unfortunately, this was not done retrospectively, but only for those who had decided to buy a house after the tax hike.
zeroshiki
Veteran
Posts: 853
Joined: Thu May 27, 2021 3:11 am

Re: Variable vs Fixed rate mortgage

Post by zeroshiki »

Wales4rugbyWC19 wrote: Sun Jun 20, 2021 11:32 am
When they increased the Sales tax the mortgage tax credit was extended from ten years to thirteen years. Unfortunately, this was not done retrospectively, but only for those who had decided to buy a house after the tax hike.
The last 3 years of the 13 years comes with quite a lot of caveats not the least of which it only applies to people who buy a house between 2019 to 2022. The tax credit for the last 3 years is also smaller. The rule says 1% of the current balance OR 1% of 40M whichever is smaller OR 2% divided by 3 of the price of the house.
JapaneseMike
Veteran
Posts: 126
Joined: Wed Nov 08, 2017 2:11 pm

Re: Variable vs Fixed rate mortgage

Post by JapaneseMike »

zeroshiki wrote: Sun Jun 20, 2021 1:26 pm
Wales4rugbyWC19 wrote: Sun Jun 20, 2021 11:32 am
When they increased the Sales tax the mortgage tax credit was extended from ten years to thirteen years. Unfortunately, this was not done retrospectively, but only for those who had decided to buy a house after the tax hike.
The last 3 years of the 13 years comes with quite a lot of caveats not the least of which it only applies to people who buy a house between 2019 to 2022. The tax credit for the last 3 years is also smaller. The rule says 1% of the current balance OR 1% of 40M whichever is smaller OR 2% divided by 3 of the price of the house.
Do you get the full 1% tax benefit even if you're paying less than 1% interest [= free money?]
zeroshiki
Veteran
Posts: 853
Joined: Thu May 27, 2021 3:11 am

Re: Variable vs Fixed rate mortgage

Post by zeroshiki »

JapaneseMike wrote: Wed Aug 18, 2021 10:52 am
zeroshiki wrote: Sun Jun 20, 2021 1:26 pm
Wales4rugbyWC19 wrote: Sun Jun 20, 2021 11:32 am
When they increased the Sales tax the mortgage tax credit was extended from ten years to thirteen years. Unfortunately, this was not done retrospectively, but only for those who had decided to buy a house after the tax hike.
The last 3 years of the 13 years comes with quite a lot of caveats not the least of which it only applies to people who buy a house between 2019 to 2022. The tax credit for the last 3 years is also smaller. The rule says 1% of the current balance OR 1% of 40M whichever is smaller OR 2% divided by 3 of the price of the house.
Do you get the full 1% tax benefit even if you're paying less than 1% interest [= free money?]
For now yes but we don't know what guidance the tax authority is going to give for 2022. There's speculation that will change it so you can't be paying negative interest.
User avatar
Roger Van Zant
Veteran
Posts: 580
Joined: Tue Sep 01, 2020 7:33 am
Location: Kyushu

Re: Variable vs Fixed rate mortgage

Post by Roger Van Zant »

I bought a house built in 1997 back in 2017. I got a 100% 20-year mortgage through a local 信用金庫 (same one my company uses). First five years are fixed at 1.8%. Not sure what is going to happen next year; presumably I'll get a letter asking if I want to continue fixed or change to a variable rate.
Investments:
Company DB scheme ✓
iDeCo (Monex) eMaxis Slim All Country ✓
新NISA (SBI) eMaxis Slim All Country ✓
Japanese pension (kosei nenkin) ✓
UK pension (Class 2 payer) ✓
zeroshiki
Veteran
Posts: 853
Joined: Thu May 27, 2021 3:11 am

Re: Variable vs Fixed rate mortgage

Post by zeroshiki »

Each person's tolerance for pain is of course different but the absolute safest/worst plan out there, a flat 35, is like 1% for 35 years. You seriously should reconsider refinancing.
User avatar
Roger Van Zant
Veteran
Posts: 580
Joined: Tue Sep 01, 2020 7:33 am
Location: Kyushu

Re: Variable vs Fixed rate mortgage

Post by Roger Van Zant »

zeroshiki wrote: Fri Aug 27, 2021 12:50 pm Each person's tolerance for pain is of course different but the absolute safest/worst plan out there, a flat 35, is like 1% for 35 years. You seriously should reconsider refinancing.
I think it is high because I only wanted a 20-year term, so the bank has fewer years to make money off me compared to a 35-year mortgage. I suspect if I decide to re-finance I will incur hefty fees. I will see what is on offer come April 2022, when my current five-year fixed term is up.
Investments:
Company DB scheme ✓
iDeCo (Monex) eMaxis Slim All Country ✓
新NISA (SBI) eMaxis Slim All Country ✓
Japanese pension (kosei nenkin) ✓
UK pension (Class 2 payer) ✓
zeroshiki
Veteran
Posts: 853
Joined: Thu May 27, 2021 3:11 am

Re: Variable vs Fixed rate mortgage

Post by zeroshiki »

I'm looking at Rakuten Bank's page right now and they charge 0.99% of the amount as a fee and a locked 1.15% interest rate for a 20 year flat35 loan. There are probably other banks that can give you better rates for refinancing.

Again, I have no experience as an advisor and this is not advice but you should shop around for better rates. A 0.6% yearly difference is probably enough to swallow the refinancing fees.
Post Reply