Sentences with phrase «rather than the full balance»

With bi-weekly payments, you pay half of the monthly mortgage payment every 2 weeks, rather than the full balance once a month.
With biweekly payments, you pay half of the monthly mortgage payment every 2 weeks, rather than the full balance once a month.

Not exact matches

For one, a patch of land can provide a full and balanced diet for more people if the people eat the food that grows on it rather than feed the food to an animal and then eat the animal.
A party for those whose priorities include the Welfare State, workers» rights, trade unionism, the co-operative movement, consumer protection, strong communities, conservation rather than environmentalism, fair taxation, full employment, public ownership, proper local government, a powerful Parliament, the monarchy, the organic Constitution, national sovereignty, civil liberties, the Union, the Commonwealth, the countryside, grammar schools, traditional moral and social values, economic patriotism, balanced migration, a realist foreign policy, and a base of real property for every household to resist both over-mighty commercial interests and an over-mighty State.
Loans secured by your home will generally have lower interest rates, approximately 3.5 % to 6.5 %, than loans secured by the solar panel system, which range from 3.5 % to 13.24 %, because the borrower can repossess a larger asset with more value — your home — to recover the full balance due rather than a solar system that has likely lost part of its value over time.
An account that's more than 90 days past due, on the other hand, is at risk of default and many creditors would rather collect something on those accounts, even if it's not the full balance.
On one site, I read that you should pay off a balance in full over a period of a few months rather than in one lump sum?
Low APR credit cards are best if you plan to carry a balance rather than pay off your bill in full each month.
Plus, if you can't pay off your full balance before the end of the promotional period, no problem; you'll only be charged interest on the remaining balance, rather than the full purchase price.
Individual borrowers who expect to prepay their loans early should generally favor a combination of lower principal balance and higher interest rate (which stops accruing after prepayment), rather than a below - market interest rate and higher principal balance (which much be paid in full, regardless of prepayment).
Well, charge cards require balances to be paid in full at the end of the billing cycle rather than allow the balance to be carried over into the following month.
And for student loans, lenders now use the actual minimum monthly payment amount to calculate debt - to - income rather than 1 percent of the full balance.
I, personally, would rather see a consumer make regular payments for the balance in full where it doesn't strain the consumer rather than pin them up against the wall and ask them for a settlement.
It's better to have your debt in forbearance, rather than default, as legally the borrowers can demand the full remaining balance.
Because it's a charge card rather than a credit card, customers must pay their balance off in full each month or face late fees.
If you happen to be a shopper who pays your balance in full each month rather than carrying balances month to month, the APR probably won't be a concern.
But, in many cases, they're paying off their balances in full each month rather than letting their debt sit and accumulate interest.
This means you'll need to pay off your balance in full each month, rather than being able to carry a balance from month to month.
Keeps me refreshed, focused when I am working, balanced and full of positive energy rather than nervous energy which is what I have when I do work too much and rely on too much caffeine Just offering an alternative perspective.
Unfortunately, much of the discussion has been based on graphics, energy - balance models and descriptions of what the forced component is, rather than the full ensemble from the coupled models.
But rather than describing this balance to readers, the sensational prevails — pitting one billing model against the other in a full - on death match!
The externship is unpaid and Paulson chose to focus on her externship rather than trying to balance school, training and her full - time job.
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