I'm in this camp. Especially after the recent tax change bumping standard deduction which for many people wipes out the advantage of having a mortgage.aev wrote:just pay extra and get out of debt as soon as you can.
Paying off your mortgage early
Moderator: Aitrus
Re: Paying off your mortgage early
TSPking
It's a gift...and a curse ~ Adrian Monk
It's a gift...and a curse ~ Adrian Monk
Re: Paying off your mortgage early
Ditto. We're about 12 months away from paying off a mortgage we first signed on four years ago. No massive down payment, just really aggressive about payments and living on about half of what we bring in. After the house is done, either of us could lose our job and we're still good to put the kids through college and still have a nice retirement. If need be, we can live at our current standard of living on about $35k a year if the house is paid off, so no worries about going bankrupt.
It's a great peace of mind.
It's a great peace of mind.
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- dougellen1
- Posts: 123
- Joined: Thu Mar 08, 2012 12:41 pm
Re: Paying off your mortgage early
dearsmiths usually has a reasonable response to these conundrums we all face. Kudos to dearsmiths!
Re: Paying off your mortgage early
I forgot to update this thread, but this is what ended up transpiring.
I did move forward with a refinance, went from a 30 year down to a 20 year, and got my interest rate reduced from 3.385% down to 2.375%. In addition to the refinance, I’m paying an extra $300 per month on the loan, so the house will be paid off in 14 years, (I retire in 19 years) so I can really throw monies at my retirement for that last 5 years or so.
Not bad considering its a newer house. Hopefully I’ll have this thing paid off just before my roof needs to be replaced.
Home Details:
I did move forward with a refinance, went from a 30 year down to a 20 year, and got my interest rate reduced from 3.385% down to 2.375%. In addition to the refinance, I’m paying an extra $300 per month on the loan, so the house will be paid off in 14 years, (I retire in 19 years) so I can really throw monies at my retirement for that last 5 years or so.
Not bad considering its a newer house. Hopefully I’ll have this thing paid off just before my roof needs to be replaced.
Home Details:
- 1,900 Sq. Feet
Built in 2019
4 Bed
2 Bath
1.3 acres
2 Car garage
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Last edited by IRQVET on Sat Jun 18, 2022 5:52 pm, edited 5 times in total.
Operation Iraqi Freedom Veteran
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Disclaimer: The contents of this thread are known to the state of California to cause cancer. (As they always seem to know more than the rest of us)
- Scarfinger
- Posts: 811
- Joined: Mon Jan 30, 2012 12:00 am
Re: Paying off your mortgage early
That's great news. My house will be paid of in 4 years, 7 years before I retire but like you... I will probably need a new roof.
Congrats on getting that major expense in a more manageable position.
Congrats on getting that major expense in a more manageable position.
I am just an average Joe. I have no clue to what the market will do.
Paul Merriman 2 fund strat: (age - 25) x2.5 = TDF + balance into S fund or variation ofTimboSlice wrote: "People really need to stop overthinking this."
Re: Paying off your mortgage early
My wife and I decided to pay off our mortgage early as well. It was hard to determine if it was the right choice at the time, but we’re glad we did. This was 6 years ago and now the property is almost twice the value we paid for it. The weight removed from paying off a mortgage was a big motivator.
We don’t have big plans for the property now, but we are renting it out now and letting it continue to increase in value. It’s also helping us with some tax write offs due to depreciation and the rent we collect will mostly go back into fixing it up. We hope to sell it later to have funds for our retirement home. Also, with all the inflation going on right now, it’s allowing us to keep our money out of banks and still fairly safe.
We don’t have big plans for the property now, but we are renting it out now and letting it continue to increase in value. It’s also helping us with some tax write offs due to depreciation and the rent we collect will mostly go back into fixing it up. We hope to sell it later to have funds for our retirement home. Also, with all the inflation going on right now, it’s allowing us to keep our money out of banks and still fairly safe.
Re: Paying off your mortgage early
If you are are locked into a low fixed rate, with much higher rates & inflation on the horizon, why pay something now with today's more expensive dollars when you can put it off to pay it with much cheaper future dollars???
Re: Paying off your mortgage early
Exactly.
To me (and I can be wrong on this), the one factor that everyone seems to agree on is that within the next 10 years, INTEREST RATES will be markedly higher than that last few years, so....
Likely Scenario 1: Inflation goes to double digits; but economy/GDP blasts off as well. Housing prices skyrocket per demand, so you win on account of paying literal pennies on the dollar on a mortgage compared to the poor schmuck who has to pay up the arse to cover his 10% mortgage interest payments ON TOP of double/triple the sale price on the same home you bought a decade ago.
Likely Scenario 2: Inflation goes to double digits; but economy flatten/crashes (stagflation). Housing prices crater due to demand destruction caused by crashing wages/low employment and of course very high home interest rates.
So the home you just eagerly paid off is now worth less than when you bought it a decade ago. Return on investment on all those forward mortgage payments = negative/loss. You could have socked those extra mortgage payments to buy foreclosures with cash or depressed equity prices instead.
Re: Paying off your mortgage early
I'm in the process of selling our house right now (pending inspection and such), and for over double what we paid for it in 2016. We had it paid off by late 2019, and sweat equity did a lot to make it an attractive buy. The interest rate we had was around 2.75%, but we wanted the debt off our backs. Now for our move from Washington State to Georgia, we have a ton of cash to pay for a new place outright, so increasing mortgage interest rates won't affect our ability to buy. We're even thinking of renting for a while to see if the market tanks and take advantage of a drop in housing prices. Where we're moving to is much cheaper than what we left, so either way we'll be paying less for more house. Our goal is to not go back into debt again.bloobs wrote: ↑Fri Apr 29, 2022 10:06 am Exactly.
To me (and I can be wrong on this), the one factor that everyone seems to agree on is that within the next 10 years, INTEREST RATES will be markedly higher than that last few years, so....
Likely Scenario 1: Inflation goes to double digits; but economy/GDP blasts off as well. Housing prices skyrocket per demand, so you win on account of paying literal pennies on the dollar on a mortgage compared to the poor schmuck who has to pay up the arse to cover his 10% mortgage interest payments ON TOP of double/triple the sale price on the same home you bought a decade ago.
Likely Scenario 2: Inflation goes to double digits; but economy flatten/crashes (stagflation). Housing prices crater due to demand destruction caused by crashing wages/low employment and of course very high home interest rates.
So the home you just eagerly paid off is now worth less than when you bought it a decade ago. Return on investment on all those forward mortgage payments = negative/loss. You could have socked those extra mortgage payments to buy foreclosures with cash or depressed equity prices instead.
Seasonal Musings 2022: viewtopic.php?f=14&t=19005
Recommended Reading: http://tspcenter.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=13474
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Re: Paying off your mortgage early
We did the same, sold in Oregon and moved out to Florida. Getting off the left coast was the best move for me and my family. Both quality of life and financially speaking. The south east has alot of people moving here from liberal cities and states, escaping the high crime and even higher tax rates. It was a good move! Equity wise, we are already up $100K in 18 months! Like I said, this place is exploding.
Last edited by IRQVET on Sat Jun 18, 2022 5:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Operation Iraqi Freedom Veteran
Disclaimer: The contents of this thread are known to the state of California to cause cancer. (As they always seem to know more than the rest of us)
Disclaimer: The contents of this thread are known to the state of California to cause cancer. (As they always seem to know more than the rest of us)
Re: Paying off your mortgage early
I think you would need to deduct about 20% from your home value to get a more accurate picture of were you stand. Still, not bad.Aitrus wrote: ↑Sun May 01, 2022 9:46 amI'm in the process of selling our house right now (pending inspection and such), and for over double what we paid for it in 2016. We had it paid off by late 2019, and sweat equity did a lot to make it an attractive buy. The interest rate we had was around 2.75%, but we wanted the debt off our backs. Now for our move from Washington State to Georgia, we have a ton of cash to pay for a new place outright, so increasing mortgage interest rates won't affect our ability to buy. We're even thinking of renting for a while to see if the market tanks and take advantage of a drop in housing prices. Where we're moving to is much cheaper than what we left, so either way we'll be paying less for more house. Our goal is to not go back into debt again.bloobs wrote: ↑Fri Apr 29, 2022 10:06 am Exactly.
To me (and I can be wrong on this), the one factor that everyone seems to agree on is that within the next 10 years, INTEREST RATES will be markedly higher than that last few years, so....
Likely Scenario 1: Inflation goes to double digits; but economy/GDP blasts off as well. Housing prices skyrocket per demand, so you win on account of paying literal pennies on the dollar on a mortgage compared to the poor schmuck who has to pay up the arse to cover his 10% mortgage interest payments ON TOP of double/triple the sale price on the same home you bought a decade ago.
Likely Scenario 2: Inflation goes to double digits; but economy flatten/crashes (stagflation). Housing prices crater due to demand destruction caused by crashing wages/low employment and of course very high home interest rates.
So the home you just eagerly paid off is now worth less than when you bought it a decade ago. Return on investment on all those forward mortgage payments = negative/loss. You could have socked those extra mortgage payments to buy foreclosures with cash or depressed equity prices instead.
Everything's relative, as Einstein would say.....
https://www.in2013dollars.com/us/inflat ... ce%20index.
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