Anonymous wrote:I would transfer to zero percent credit card first. Even with up front fees you’ll save something like $3k or 4k in interest over a year. Then if you still need to reduce contributions do that
Anonymous wrote:You need to not just pay off this debt, but also establish a maintenance sinking fund and an emergency fund; this story suggests that they are both missing or underfunded.
Anonymous wrote:I would transfer to zero percent credit card first. Even with up front fees you’ll save something like $3k or 4k in interest over a year. Then if you still need to reduce contributions do that
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Due to necessary home renovations and unexpected car repairs, we are currently about 20k in debt. We have been paying it off at rates higher than the minimum, but feel like we’re hardly making a dent. We recently met with a financial advisor who suggested we temporarily reduce the % of contribution to the 401k to what the employer matches so that there is more income to allow higher payments each month towards lowering the debt. Each of us has about $1M saved and don’t plan to retire for another 10 years . Would bump it back up once the debt level is manageable.
Would anyone concur with this?
Yes. And I would not need to pay a financial adviser to tell me this. This is “duh” territory.
Anonymous wrote:In your case, yes. In most years you’ll earn more on your investments than you can contribute.
Anonymous wrote:Due to necessary home renovations and unexpected car repairs, we are currently about 20k in debt. We have been paying it off at rates higher than the minimum, but feel like we’re hardly making a dent. We recently met with a financial advisor who suggested we temporarily reduce the % of contribution to the 401k to what the employer matches so that there is more income to allow higher payments each month towards lowering the debt. Each of us has about $1M saved and don’t plan to retire for another 10 years . Would bump it back up once the debt level is manageable.
Would anyone concur with this?
Anonymous wrote:If your jobs are secure, maybe do a 401K loan, and pay that back instead of the debt.