Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m laughing at people saying the house is OP’s problem. It’s not.
$400 equity in the house. Only a $2800 monthly payment. They are in a great situation on housing.
He chose to drop money into the house instead of paying off higher rate student loan debt. That was dumb. Should have gotten less house, wiped out the debt, there’d be in a better position with savings. They are late 30s, they aren’t that young.
You have NO idea if he dropped money into his home or not. I also have a home worth 1M with a FINANCED amount of 475k and a mortgage of $2100/mo.
My purchase price was 550k.
It’s called appreciation, payments, and then refinance.
The house is the very last of OPs issues. You cant get a 2800/mo anywhere in the dc area anywhere these days.
OPs problem is his wife. She needs a real job with real benefits and a higher income.
Anonymous wrote:Should've paid off the student loan, invest heavily from 2008-2022 and then buy a house.
Most people go for the house as soon as they have the income and qualify. Is the equity big down payment or you've been paying 15 years?
Your 529 grows slower than you pay interest on the student loan. Pay off the student loan and you free up cash in case kids go to college.
Start paying off the loan unless it disappears somewhere some day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m laughing at people saying the house is OP’s problem. It’s not.
$400 equity in the house. Only a $2800 monthly payment. They are in a great situation on housing.
He chose to drop money into the house instead of paying off higher rate student loan debt. That was dumb. Should have gotten less house, wiped out the debt, there’d be in a better position with savings. They are late 30s, they aren’t that young.
Anonymous wrote:I’m laughing at people saying the house is OP’s problem. It’s not.
$400 equity in the house. Only a $2800 monthly payment. They are in a great situation on housing.