Bank Of America Mortgage Accelerator Program

  1. Bank Of America Mortgage Payment
  2. Bank Of America Mortgage Contact
  3. Bank Of America Mortgage Accelerator Program Program

Mortgage Accelerator Programs. Paying off your mortgage more quickly than required does more than get you out of making a monthly payment. It can also save you many thousands of dollars. For example, if you paid an extra $172.02 each month on a 30-year mortgage of $350,000 at 4.5 percent interest, you would increase your payment by just 9.7 percent. Nov 02, 2006  In Australia, more than one-third of homeowners use a mortgage accelerator program. In the U.K., it’s about 25 percent. In the U.S., two firms currently offering these mortgages are Macquarie Mortgages USA, where it is called the Macquarie Asset Manager, and CMG Financial Services, whose offering is called the Home Ownership Accelerator.

At NerdWallet, we strive to help you make financial decisions with confidence. To do this, many or all of the products featured here are from our partners. However, this doesn’t influence our evaluations. Our opinions are our own.

Bank of America®‎ offers competitive rewards credit cards to the general public. But if you’re a banking or investment customer, the cards can become outstanding choices through the bank’s Preferred Rewards program.

That’s because the bank offers accelerated points and cash back from its rewards credit cards — along with other banking goodies — as part of its loyalty program, which can be especially lucrative for high-balance customers. Credit cards that qualify for a rewards boost of 25% to 75% are the Bank of America® Travel Rewards credit card and the Bank of America® Cash Rewards credit card.

Granted, you’ll need to house tens of thousands of banking and investment dollars with Bank of America® to qualify for what it calls a “relationship bonus.” And credit card rewards probably aren’t the foremost factor when deciding on a financial institution for your household wealth.

Still, if Bank of America® financial products appeal to you, consider its Preferred Rewards program and the accompanying boost to credit card rewards.

What is the Preferred Rewards program?

With the Preferred Rewards program, Bank of America® customers get a bigger bump if they stash mounds of cash at the bank or its Merrill-branded investment arms.

To qualify for the Bank of America®‎ Preferred Rewards program, you need:

  • A Bank of America®‎ personal checking account
  • $20,000 or more in qualifying Bank of America® accounts, which include eligible Merrill investment accounts (calculated as a three-month average of combined balances)

Preferred Rewards tiers are labeled Gold, Platinum and Platinum Honors, based on balances. The tiers determine the credit card rewards boost.

GoldPlatinumPlatinum Honors
Required balance$20,000-$49,999$50,000-$99,999More than $100,000
Relationship bonus25%50%75%

Once you reach a rewards tier, you can keep the program benefits for a total of 15 months if your balances drop below the thresholds.

Preferred Rewards offers more than extra credit card rewards. You can also get interest-rate boosts on money market accounts, no-fee ATM transactions, reduced mortgage origination fees and loan rate discounts, among other perks. For more information, see the Bank of America® website.

Cards that qualify

Rewards credit cards under the Bank of America brand qualify for Preferred Rewards. Excluded are business credit cards and such non-rewards cards as the BankAmericard® credit card, the bank’s secured cards and its non-rewards student card.

Bank of America® Travel Rewards credit card

  • Recommended Credit Score
  • Good - Excellent
  • Card Details
  • Pros

    • No annual fee and no foreign transaction fees
    • Generous flat rewards rate on all purchases
    • Flexibility to book travel how you want
    • Rewards accelerator if you bank with Bank of America or invest with Merrill

    Cons

    • More restrictive than a straight cash back card
    • If you're a big spender with excellent credit and willing to pay an annual fee, there are cards with higher rewards

    Annual Fees

    $0

    APR

    • APR: 17.24% - 25.24% Variable APR
    • Penalty APR: up to 29.99% APR
    • Cash Advance APR: See Terms

    Bonus Offers

    25,000 online bonus points after you make at least $1,000 in purchases in the first 90 days of account opening - that can be a $250 statement credit toward travel purchases

    Intro APR

    • 0% on Purchases for 12 billing cycles
  • Additional Information
    • Earn unlimited 1.5 points per $1 spent on all purchases, with no annual fee and no foreign transaction fees and your points don't expire
    • 25,000 online bonus points after you make at least $1,000 in purchases in the first 90 days of account opening - that can be a $250 statement credit toward travel purchases
    • Use your card to book your trip how and where you want – you’re not limited to specific websites with blackout dates or restrictions
    • Redeem points for a statement credit to pay for flights, hotels, vacation packages, cruises, rental cars, or baggage fees
    • Comes with chip technology for enhanced security and protection at chip-enabled terminals
    • 0% Introductory APR for 12 billing cycles for purchases. After the intro APR ends, 17.24% - 25.24% Variable APR will apply
    • If you’re a Preferred Rewards member, you can earn 25% - 75% more points on every purchase

The Bank of America® Travel Rewards credit card offers rewards of 1.5 points on every dollar spent. With Preferred Rewards, cardholders can get a 25% to 75% rewards boost on points earned.

Here’s how the annual rewards rack up for a consumer charging $1,000 per month on the card.

Relationship levelPoints per $1 spentAnnual points ($12,000 in spending)
None1.518,000
Gold1.87522,500
Platinum2.2527,000
Platinum Honors 2.62531,500

Bank of America® Cash Rewards credit card

  • Recommended Credit Score
  • Good - Excellent
  • Card Details
  • Pros

    • No annual fee
    • Cash bonus offer
    • Cash rewards

    Cons

    • If you're a big spender with excellent credit and willing to pay an annual fee, there are cards with higher rewards

    Annual Fees

    $0

    APR

    • APR: 16.24% - 26.24% Variable APR
    • Penalty APR: up to 29.99% APR

    Bonus Offers

    $200 online cash rewards bonus after you make at least $1,000 in purchases in the first 90 days of account opening

    Intro APR

    • 0% Introductory APR for 15 billing cycles for purchases, and for any balance transfers made in the first 60 days
  • Additional Information
    • No annual fee
    • $200 online cash rewards bonus after you make at least $1,000 in purchases in the first 90 days of account opening
    • Earn 3% cash back on gas or your choice of one of five other popular categories, 2% at grocery stores and wholesale clubs (up to $2,500 in combined choice category/grocery store/wholesale club quarterly purchases) and unlimited 1% on all other purchases
    • 0% Introductory APR for 15 billing cycles for purchases, and for any balance transfers made in the first 60 days. After the intro APR offer ends, 16.24% - 26.24% Variable APR will apply. A 3% fee (min $10) applies to all balance transfers
    • No expiration on rewards
    • If you're a Preferred Rewards member, you can earn 25% - 75% more cash back on every purchase

The Bank of America® Cash Rewards credit card has revamped its cash back offerings. It pays 3% cash back in your choice of spending category and 2% at grocery stores and wholesale clubs on up to $2,500 combined spending, and unlimited 1% on all other purchases. Category spending choices include gas, online shopping, dining, travel, drug stores, or home improvement/furnishings. You can update your choice category for future purchases once each calendar month, or do nothing and it stays the same.

Assuming you max out your bonus rewards each quarter in a ratio of $1,000 on the category of your choice to $1,500 at grocery stores (and $500 on other purchases), here’s the annual rewards breakdown for a person spending $12,000 per year.

Relationship levelCategory/grocery/other rewards ratesAnnual cash rewards
None3%, 2%, 1%$260
Gold3.75%, 2.5%, 1.25%$325
Platinum4.5%, 3%, 1.5%$390
Platinum Honors 5.25%, 3.5%, 1.75%$455

Why you might avoid Preferred Rewards

Compare Bank of America® account offerings for banking and investing with other choices. Higher fees and expenses on some financial products — or lower savings rates — could reduce or wipe out bonus earnings from credit card rewards.

NerdWallet rates Bank of America® banking offerings as fair overall, although the bank excels at some aspects and not others.

» MORE:How to choose a bank

Credit card rewards shouldn’t drive your decision on where to do banking and investing. But if your relationship with Bank of America® qualifies you for preferred status, be sure to reap your Preferred Rewards.

Gregory Karp is a staff writer at NerdWallet, a personal finance website. Email: gkarp@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @spendingsmart.

You may also like

NerdWallet's Best Rewards Credit Cards

NerdWallet's Best Rewards Credit Cards

Earn More Points and Miles With These 6 Strategies

Earn More Points and Miles With These 6 Strategies

The 'Must-Have' Credit Card for Travelers

The 'Must-Have' Credit Card for Travelers

Best Credit Card Combinations for Travel Junkies

Best Credit Card Combinations for Travel Junkies

Shop & Compare Credit Cards:

  • Print
  • Font:
  • +
  • -

With higher interest rates putting the squeeze on borrowers, a number of readers, including Linda in Tampa, have heard from a new crop of companies offering a plan to 'accelerate' their mortgages and save them a bundle-- for a fee. Here's what the people who are selling this product won't tell you.

I recently found out about a financial product called a mortgage accelerator. This is not a bimonthly payoff of a 30-year mortgage; it's a line of credit tied to an account with direct deposit that works like a checking account to pay out regular living expenses as well as paydown the balance of the house cost. The high average daily balance allows you to pay off the home loan much faster than a traditional mortgage. There is a fee, but the costs still seem so much lower than the accumulated interest of a 30 year mortgage. It sounds great, but could you investigate the good and bad points of this for me?
-- Linda R., Tampa, Fla.

There’s nothing illegal about these plans; they’re simply charging you a fee for something you can do on your own. They belong in the same category of services as “credit monitoring” companies that charge $50 a year to send you the same credit reports you can get on own for nothing. It’s kind of like someone asking to borrow your watch, telling you the time and then sending you a bill.

There are a number of flavors of “mortgage accelerators,” but they work the same way. The pitch goes like this: We’ll collect money from your checking account and make a mortgage payment on your behalf every two weeks, which works out to 13 monthly payments instead of 12. By making that extra payment, you’ll pay down your principal faster and save tens of thousands of dollars in interest payments over the life of the loan.

We called one of the more popular purveyors of this plan to get the details. To sign up, you’ll pay a one-time fee of $295 and then $5.42 a month (or about $65 a year). If the “accelerator” gets you out from under a 30-year mortgage five years early, the total cost of this plan comes to about $1,900. When you compare that to the tens of thousands of dollars in interest you’ll save, it sounds like a great deal.

Here’s the problem: you almost certainly can do the same thing yourself — for free. (Some mortgages specifically carry a “pre-payment penalty” — something to ask about, and avoid, when you’re shopping for a new loan). If yours doesn’t penalize pre-payment, you can send extra payments to reduce the principal any time you want — without paying anyone a fee.

So, as a service to our readers, try out our very own Answer Desk mortgage accelerator (at no charge). Here’s how it works:

America

Let’s say you just took out a $100,000, 30-year fixed mortgage at 6 percent. Your monthly payment comes to $599.55 and you’ll be fully paid off in 2036. During those 30 years you will have paid the bank $115,338.50 in interest. (Ouch.)

Bank Of America Mortgage Accelerator Program

If you choose to go with the Answer Desk Accelerator “$50 Plan,” add $50 to each monthly mortgage payment. You’ll be paid off in just 24.5 years, with a total interest payment of $90,035.83 – or a savings of $25,302.67. For our “$100 Plan,” add $100 to your monthly payment, which will pay you off in full in 21 years. Total interest: $75,936.94. Savings: $39,401.56.

Bank Of America Mortgage Payment

If all those extra payments are a hassle, you could also try our once-a-year Extra Monthly Payment Plan. You’ll be paid off in 25.5 years Total interest: $92,197.05 Savings: $23,141.45.

One caveat (which fee-based “accelerator” plans will forget to tell you): Our savings figures will be reduced somewhat by the tax deduction you’ll lose by paying less in mortgage interest, assuming you itemize. (To estimate your net savings, reduce the total by 10 to 35 percent, depending on your tax bracket.)

One of the pitches by mortgage accelerator purveyors is that most people “don’t have the discipline” to do this on their own. By having them deduct money from your checking account, they argue, they’ll help you stick with your early payoff plan. (On the other hand, if they screw up a monthly payment to your mortgage lender, you’re still responsible.)

The Answer Desk Accelerator has a feature to help you there, too. Try this: Open a checking account with an online bill payment feature, and then set it to churn out mortgage checks each month for $100 more than your monthly payment. Yes, things will be tight until you get used to it. But here’s one more number to help keep you on track. If you go with our $100 Plan, for example, the interest saved works out to $152.36 per payment. Though you’ll be out $100 in cash each month, over the (shortened) life of the loan, you’ll save $152.36 a month and keep it out of the bank’s hands. So our $100 Plan is really a $52.56 monthly raise.

Fee-based accelerator plans also promise to customize your plan to your specific mortgage terms and budget. The Answer Desk Accelerator has that covered, too. But you’ll need the help of a calculator to tailor your payments to your mortgage. There are a number of good ones out there; our favorite is at Bankrate.com

And it’s free.

We bought a house last year .. (and took out) a home equity line of credit at 7 percent, but it has climbed since to 8.5 percent. We have been paying for our HELOC for almost one year now, and I just realized that we barely paid the principal of the loan - almost 98 percent goes to interest rate or finance charge. What's the best way to pay off the HELOC, where a big chunk can go to its principal rather than interest rate? What would you suggest to pay off our loans quicker?
--
Francis F., East Meadow, N.Y.

You could give the Answer Desk HELOC Accelerator a try. But as you've found, the math on home equity loan's is a little different than on your conventional first mortgage — it’s even more heavily weighted in the bank's favor. (Which is why it probably wasn't explained to you properly when you applied for it.)

Unlike a mortgage or a home equity loan, most HELOCs are divided into two phases: the drawdown phase when you take money out, and the payback phase when you have to pay back the principal. In the drawdown phase, which can last as long as 10 years, you pay little, if any, principal (unless, of course, you come up with a lump sum to pay it off).

This is what makes HELOCs more difficult to get out from under. By limiting the monthly payments in the drawdown phases to interest only, the lender makes it much easier to borrow more than you otherwise could afford. And even though the monthly payments seem low, the drawdown costs you more in interest — because you’re carrying the original principal balance for years without paying it down.

Bank Of America Mortgage Contact

Bank Of America Mortgage Accelerator Program

HELOCs have also rapidly become more burdensome as short-term interest rates have risen. Three years ago, you could get a HELOC for 4 percent — very cheap money by historical standards. But as holders of HELOCs have discovered, the recent run-up in interest rates has roughly doubled the cost of these loans in three years. And unlike adjustable rate mortgages, which reset at a fixed schedule, HELOCs can — and do — change any time short-term interest rates change.

Even if rates go back down, you still face sharply higher payments when the credit line hits the payback phase. When they market these loans, most lenders reassure borrowers by pointing out that you can always just roll over your HELOC into a new one, putting you back in the “interest only” drawdown phase. Which is another way of saying you’re can be “interest slave” for the rest of your life.

The Answer Desk Accelerator HELOC plan can help. After paying off your monthly interest, send another check, and it will applied to pay down your principal. But if you’re carrying a big balance on your HELOC, you may want to tap any savings you've got to pay it off faster —especially if you’re paying 8 percent interest on a HELOC and getting 2 percent interest on those savings.

Bank Of America Mortgage Accelerator Program Program

© 2013 msnbc.com Reprints