Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a no-brainer. You do not pay off the mortgage. That is a very middle class way of thinking.
The rich don't have mortgages my friend. There is plenty of $$. No need to scrimp. You have a poor mans mentality.
The rich have mortgages from when they were available at 3% or less. And they are in no rush to pay them off.
I have a 3% loan. Why would I give extra money to my bank as a mortgage payment and have them lend it to someone else at 5-6%, when I could instead give it to them in a high-yield checking account or CD and have them pay me 4-5%? The latter is more money and more liquidity for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a no-brainer. You do not pay off the mortgage. That is a very middle class way of thinking.
The rich don't have mortgages my friend. There is plenty of $$. No need to scrimp. You have a poor mans mentality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know yourself best. If keeping that much $$ is going to tempt you into spending habits that you don't want, then paying off your mortgage is the smarter choice.
You could pay off your mortgage then set up an automatic monthly transfer of an amount just under your old mortgage payment into to an investment account. And then don't touch that account until you really need it.
Op here. That’s a great option - my plan would be to push the old mortgage payment into the 529s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a no-brainer. You do not pay off the mortgage. That is a very middle class way of thinking.
The rich don't have mortgages my friend. There is plenty of $$. No need to scrimp. You have a poor mans mentality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a no-brainer. You do not pay off the mortgage. That is a very middle class way of thinking.
The rich don't have mortgages my friend. There is plenty of $$. No need to scrimp. You have a poor mans mentality.
Anonymous wrote:This is a no-brainer. You do not pay off the mortgage. That is a very middle class way of thinking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know yourself best. If keeping that much $$ is going to tempt you into spending habits that you don't want, then paying off your mortgage is the smarter choice.
You could pay off your mortgage then set up an automatic monthly transfer of an amount just under your old mortgage payment into to an investment account. And then don't touch that account until you really need it.
Op here. That’s a great option - my plan would be to push the old mortgage payment into the 529s.
Anonymous wrote:We don’t know enough about your finances yet. Are all three of the 529s fully funded? Meaning enough for state school - multiple in state costs times four and make sure you have enough in the 529s first. I guarantee if you have to take out ones for college, the interest rate will be more than 3%
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Paying off a mortgage sounds good but it's actually not.
We did ours and it was great.