Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are behind because you have a 900k home and 250k in debt. I’m not sure what you can do given these long term fixed debts other than one of you needs to get new jobs that make more money. What industry or field are you in? Can you move up in your organization? Can you make more if you jump?
This is the OP, our house is no $900k. We bought it for $580k 4 years ago, and made significant renovations and the appraisal value is in the $900ks that’s why e have the equity.
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.
Anonymous wrote:Your wife needs a higher paying job. She needs to be contributing the max to a 401k plus a match. 80k isn’t enough if she is college educated. My local target store pays close to $50k.
Anonymous wrote:The emergency fund seems high. Is it at least in a HYSA? I would probably take half of it and max the Roth for a few years.
Of course DW thinks you’re doing fine. You make almost triple what she makes lol
Do you have life insurance? If not, get a $2M policy and hopefully that will make you feel somewhat better.
Anonymous wrote:You can make whatever life choices you and your DW want, OP, and don’t worry about scathing criticisms from DCUM. We have a lower income and are in our fifties with two kids in college and still have a mortgage situation like yours. We’re fine, because we’ve had twenty years of retirement growth. Over time the investments you have will secure you. Your wife’s job is perfectly well paying, but she really should start a 401K and contribute 10% to it. Your savings are a great cushion and your cash flow will sustain you. I’d work on figuring out how to worry less, not how to spend less.
Anonymous wrote:The emergency fund seems high. Is it at least in a HYSA? I would probably take half of it and max the Roth for a few years.
Of course DW thinks you’re doing fine. You make almost triple what she makes lol
Do you have life insurance? If not, get a $2M policy and hopefully that will make you feel somewhat better.
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:You are behind because you have a 900k home and 250k in debt. I’m not sure what you can do given these long term fixed debts other than one of you needs to get new jobs that make more money. What industry or field are you in? Can you move up in your organization? Can you make more if you jump?