Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I should add that all the kids are out of college and married. We have a mortgage of about 2k a month and no other debt.
I mean, I'd probably pay off the house. I know its not necessary but just a mental thing before quitting work. But obviously you can easily do what you are proposing.
I'd work one more year, pay off the house, get everything in order, then walk away.
Another miserable year, another million dollars that's taxed to death and ends up being a lot less. Then you pay off the house and have no mortgage but your overall net worth doesn't change. You just have more of it invested in your house and not generating any income. So your portfolio generates less money but you have no mortgage.
Isn't that six of one, half dozen of the other, except you've lost another year?
You do not understand net worth, my friend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I should add that all the kids are out of college and married. We have a mortgage of about 2k a month and no other debt.
I mean, I'd probably pay off the house. I know its not necessary but just a mental thing before quitting work. But obviously you can easily do what you are proposing.
I'd work one more year, pay off the house, get everything in order, then walk away.
Another miserable year, another million dollars that's taxed to death and ends up being a lot less. Then you pay off the house and have no mortgage but your overall net worth doesn't change. You just have more of it invested in your house and not generating any income. So your portfolio generates less money but you have no mortgage.
Isn't that six of one, half dozen of the other, except you've lost another year?
Anonymous wrote:That's one of the longest run on sentences I've seen in a long time.
Responding as a friend...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I should add that all the kids are out of college and married. We have a mortgage of about 2k a month and no other debt.
I mean, I'd probably pay off the house. I know its not necessary but just a mental thing before quitting work. But obviously you can easily do what you are proposing.
I'd work one more year, pay off the house, get everything in order, then walk away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I should add that all the kids are out of college and married. We have a mortgage of about 2k a month and no other debt.
I mean, I'd probably pay off the house. I know its not necessary but just a mental thing before quitting work. But obviously you can easily do what you are proposing.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I should add that all the kids are out of college and married. We have a mortgage of about 2k a month and no other debt.
Anonymous wrote:Would you walk away/retire in your early/mid 50s from a job that you absolutely hated but were pretty much guaranteed around $1 million a year for another decade knowing that if you retired now your portfolio would conservatively generate about $200k a year and your employer would allow you and your spouse to stay on its health insurance forever if you paid the full premium?
Asking for a friend . . .