Your Iowa home value is going up 5.75 % anyway . You are just putting money in the bank every time you make your payment. You are paying property taxes and interest that is tax deductible too. You will not lose a cent. Stay there for a long time and some day , when your house is payed off , you will see that the value has likely doubled if you have a 20 yr. loan. Location is the key and Iowa have very few bad locations . The day will come when you will realise that your house was a deal. When I bought my 4 ac. in S.E. Wisconsin in farm country , I almost didnt buy it cause it was $55,000. There is another 4 ac. next to me that is still vacant. I wish I would have just bought that 4 ac. too. To my north , there was 23 ac. for $123,000 . I wish I could have afforded that parcel too but there was no way I could have all 3 of them. In 1988 , in Price co . Wis. I could have bought 20 ac. of flat woods that had 18 yr. old popple trees on it. The trees were about 6" dia. for $3,000 and likely could have bought it for $2,500. By now, the trees would have been harvested , I no doubt would have shot a bunch of deer off it, and would have had a harvest by now that would likely have payed me $10,000 at $500 ac. for the pulp. Instead , I bought 7ac. with 300' of South Fork Flambeau River frontage down the road for $3,000 and still have it today with a simple cabin on it . I was offered $125,000 3 yrs. ago . You will surely be happy you bought that place when it is payed off. My grandpa bought a 96 ac. farm with the farmhouse , with a barn that had 1/2 mi. of river frontage on the Red River in Shawano co. Wis. He payed way too much for it in 1928 . Two yrs. later , he could have bought it for half what he did . He payed $4,800 for the property. We still have the 52 ac. with river frontage and it's worth about 1 million dollars. You wont lose a penny on your property.