| We inherited over 2 million a couple of years ago. We did not pay off our mortgage (less than 2.5% interest rate) and the money has done very well invested. We contributed some to our 529s as well. |
Not true AT ALL |
+1 Good lord |
good point here--if your kids work, have them open Roth IRAs and match whatever they earn with retirement contributions up to the annual max. This will be a small portion of your windfall that can pay off for your kids down the road. Just invest in a target date fund or a broad ETF or something. |
And what if my mortgage is owned by a corporation? I feel no loyalty to them or their shareholders. If you would like to make a donation to Freddie Mac to make life easier for American taxpayers, go for it. You can also send money directly to the US Treasury if you want. |
Unused money in 529s can now be rolled over into Roth IRAs. https://www.savingforcollege.com/article/roll-over-529-plan-funds-to-a-roth-ira |
You, sir, are an idiot. https://finance.yahoo.com/news/why-billionaires-elon-musk-mark-150100026.html |
The rich generally do have mortgages - makes sense to have a 3% loan on your house and invest elsewhere. It’s why luxury home prices drop so much as interest rates rise |
Lots of people got 2.5-2.75 during that early 2020 window. |
The rich certainly do have mortgages. And those that don’t, still use debt. Probably more aggressively than nearly anyone else. |
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Pay the mortgage down by a third to a half, invest the rest. No reason it has to be one or the other.
But, I would dollar cost average given the recent returns and max uncertainty, right now. |
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First, paying off the mortgage is financially the wrong move. BUT, the psychological benefit can exceed the financial, so it may not be the wrong life move. 100% agree that if you do this you then set up an automatic payment into savings and investment equal to your old mortgage payment.
Second, it does have to be pay it off or not. You can split the money and pay half off. |
| Do whatever will help you sleep better (i.e., the psychological benefit mentioned by the previous poster). If you cannot decide, maybe try a little of everything. Unless there are some unmentioned restrictions, no one is forcing you do anything immediately. |
With that mortgage rate, I would put the money in the market and invest in low-cost S&P500 index funds earning around 8-10%/ year over the LONG term. Although this highly-overinflated market is due for a significant pullback based on historical economic numbers, it’s difficult to consistently time the market. Paying off the mortgage with that rate is really a psychological move, if you want peace of mind. |
| Op here. Thanks for the (mostly) helpful advice. My concern is that if we have a large fund that doesn’t have withdrawal penalties we’ll just spend it rather than make the compromises we’ve been making for the last 30 years. The only reason that we have so much in retirement savings is that neither of us can stomach the penalties that we would have to pay if we raided it. |