| Zero. I don’t own a home anymore after divorce. |
|
42
Primary residence 45% Rental property 38% No vacation home |
Math education in this country really must be improved. |
|
46
Main 80% Vacation 50% |
You are the 35th poster on this thread. If by that you extrapolate that "most people did what you did," I'm really not sure what else to say, other than that your other decisions make a lot of sense (as in it's clear why you made those decisions, not that the math makes sense). Carry on. - 52, with a $650k mortgage balance at 2.625% that I am never, ever paying off early |
It . . . isn't? At all? You can estimate equity based on one or the other, but not both. JFC. |
That's not how you calculate equity. I weep for the future. Presumably your spouse makes your money? |
I'm sure I'd understand. I still wouldn't care, though. Not sure why you felt the need to interject yourself in this thread. |
| I don’t actually know what our house is worth - we bought it in 2007 for 1.2 million (murch district) and put 500k down. We’ve put about 1 million back into the house over the past 15 years and I think it would sell for about 3 million now. We’ve got about 200k left on the mortgage, so 200k debt to 2.8 million equity. |
|
100%
Age 52 |
There's a big difference between having 20% equity (the down) and 70% equity. At the latter you are probably also in a position to pay it off outright with other funds, or if emergencies happen and you need to sell, you have a lot of equity left after the sale. You can withstand temporary market declines, not face foreclosure threats so much. I could pay off my mortgage tomorrow but those funds remaining in the market in the last few years have made me far, far, far more money than any savings from not paying interest any more, plus I still get to deduct the interest from my taxes. Right now my mortgage is such a small share of my income (it's about 20% of my take home) and out of that monthly payment part of it is still the property taxes and insurance, which would continue to be paid even without a mortgage. Rationally, there's no benefit to paying off the mortgage early. And, as a PP pointed out, even if you have no mortgage and "own" your house outright, you're still on the hook for taxes and insurance, plus the never ending home maintenance. |
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46
Primary home: 50% Second home: 80% Third home: 100% Fourth home: 100% |
| 47, 37%, purchased three years ago. |
|
47
Primary 70% Secondary 65% |
4 homes or this includes rental properties? If the former where are there and what are they each worth? |