Anonymous wrote:*raises hand* we're contributing but not maxing out. We have really sound personal finance habits but very little faith in the future of the economy. Signed, disallusioned millennial.
Anonymous wrote:I would max out to limit taxes. If you choose to use 1,000 on your house instead of putting in your 401k you're choosing to pay at least 2,500 in income taxes. The 401k is one of the best tax breaks out there. I'd only not use it if you like giving the government money.
Anonymous wrote:I would max out to limit taxes. If you choose to use 1,000 on your house instead of putting in your 401k you're choosing to pay at least 2,500 in income taxes. The 401k is one of the best tax breaks out there. I'd only not use it if you like giving the government money.
Anonymous wrote:Have you price the work you want done?
I would go the HELOC route if that is enough for what you want to do. The price of renovations does go up and interest rates are low, so given your large equity and income I would consider using a HELOC and then ultimately refinancing to consolidate your loans if cashflow is a concern, as you could probably end up with a mortgage payment not that much higher than your current one.
Anonymous wrote:We're late 30s/early 40s, have nowhere near $1M saved for retirement, and we're not maxing. We make a combined HHI of about $185k and between childcare, mortgage, and student loans we just haven't been able to do it. We both contribute enough to get the match (5% for him, more like 3% for me) and we're definitely hoping to increase in the near future when childcare expenses decrease.
I don't know what I'd do in your case. Not a 401(K) loan, but we've also been wary of HELOCs. It means we've been fixing our house up little bit by little bit for 3 years but it's also kept us from taking on more debt (we have only mortgage and student loans).