Brick, if you have a $200,000 mortgage and your home is worth say $500,000, you technically have a moderate one at about 40% of equity.
On a combined income of $100,000, a 5% loan at present would mean you only need to contribute $15,000+ per year to meet interest payments on remanning 300,000 loan.
That would be easy, and perhaps you can pay off a further $10,000-15,000 per year to get mortgage down fast.
However, if one of you lost your job, payments would be that much harder.
This is all fine in these times of low interest rates.
The other day, the ABC finance guy suggested that people borrow more where interest rates are low and pay off more when interest rats are high.
In these uncertain times, I would be paying off as much as possible now while you have the chance.
I am a bit of a conservative with financé, I have to be because had little before age of 40.
However, I did predict what was going to happen with the gfc and saved my own and a few others super. Copped a lot of laughter from workmates, but I suppose they were not laughing after the crash came.
I hope I am wrong about the future, but I still think dark clouds are looming, maybe in a few years, maybe within a decade. If it happens, Aust will be one of the worst affected countries due to its high reliance on housing to drive the economy.