Anonymous wrote:I'm dealing with the same decision. Second house. Got proceeds from sale of prior house and want to use about $100k of that to pay down the mortgage (the lender will recast the payments for the remaining life of the loan for no fee). Issue is that I want this house paid off in 15 years so we don't have payments in retirement. Mortgage rate is 3.75 but we lose a lot of our deductions due to PEP /Pease and AMT so don't get the full tax benefit. Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i would definitely save for retirement over paying off your mortgage. your return is going to be far better in the stock market over a 30-40 year horizon. is this guaranteed? no, but i think to assume you are going to get a worse than 3% annualized return over that period of time is overly cautious.
i would invest as much as you can, as early as you can and let that money work for you. if you spend the next 10 years paying off your mortgage and neglecting your retirement savings, you are going to be behind the eight ball.
+1. You can always pay off your mortgage once you retire. I say this as someone who is retired in their 40ties.
Plus retirement protected from creditors and bankruptcy.
Huh?!? If you have creditors and have to declare backruptcy, you should get a job and not be retired.
Anonymous wrote:We're in mid 30s, one child not in daycare. Spouse was at home and just now returned to workforce, so family income which was previously $115k will now be $211k. Both jobs stable. Only debt is mortgage of $440k which has been tight on one salary. Ample savings.
Newly employed spouse will make full TSP contribution of $17,500 in 2014.
Would you also each contribute $5,500 to an IRA, converted to a Roth this year? Or put that money to the mortgage debt at 4.125%? It feels like borrowing from Peter to pay Paul... at the same time spouse hasn't saved much for retirement over the past 3 years while doing a small amount of consulting. We are also saving for college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i would definitely save for retirement over paying off your mortgage. your return is going to be far better in the stock market over a 30-40 year horizon. is this guaranteed? no, but i think to assume you are going to get a worse than 3% annualized return over that period of time is overly cautious.
i would invest as much as you can, as early as you can and let that money work for you. if you spend the next 10 years paying off your mortgage and neglecting your retirement savings, you are going to be behind the eight ball.
+1. You can always pay off your mortgage once you retire. I say this as someone who is retired in their 40ties.
Plus retirement protected from creditors and bankruptcy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i would definitely save for retirement over paying off your mortgage. your return is going to be far better in the stock market over a 30-40 year horizon. is this guaranteed? no, but i think to assume you are going to get a worse than 3% annualized return over that period of time is overly cautious.
i would invest as much as you can, as early as you can and let that money work for you. if you spend the next 10 years paying off your mortgage and neglecting your retirement savings, you are going to be behind the eight ball.
+1. You can always pay off your mortgage once you retire. I say this as someone who is retired in their 40ties.
Anonymous wrote:i would definitely save for retirement over paying off your mortgage. your return is going to be far better in the stock market over a 30-40 year horizon. is this guaranteed? no, but i think to assume you are going to get a worse than 3% annualized return over that period of time is overly cautious.
i would invest as much as you can, as early as you can and let that money work for you. if you spend the next 10 years paying off your mortgage and neglecting your retirement savings, you are going to be behind the eight ball.