Anonymous wrote:HS is at lease double that of elementary school. I would plan for that if you have not already.
I would get rid of H student loan, then get the new van.
I am not big into vacations either but I would do 1 trip you normally would not do.
You will eventually want your teen to have a car so they can drive the younger ones and give you a break.![]()
Since you are working on the house I would look around and see what else needs to be done... roof, floors, furniture. Might as well get the house in order for the next 15 years.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I always max out the tax advantaged savings accounts first--IRAs, 529s, etc.
NP. Would it make sense to contribute to a traditional IRA if it is non-deductible? As opposed to putting extra $ in a brokerage account? Last year, one spouse did a backdoor Roth IRA, but the other spouse did not contribute to an IRA because that spouse had pre-tax money in other IRA accounts.
You will make more putting the money into investments than paying off the loans.
Anonymous wrote: I always max out the tax advantaged savings accounts first--IRAs, 529s, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would use it to move and buy a larger home in a good public school district. You will save a lot of money, have a better return on your home and live in a better community.
I was wondering this as well. If you need more space and plan to keep four kids in costly schools for 12 years each BEFORE college - can you use this money to move somewhere where you don't have to do that?
We chose parochial school bc we want the kids to have a religious education and because we absolutely love the school and the surrounding community, not bc we dont like the local public school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would use it to move and buy a larger home in a good public school district. You will save a lot of money, have a better return on your home and live in a better community.
I was wondering this as well. If you need more space and plan to keep four kids in costly schools for 12 years each BEFORE college - can you use this money to move somewhere where you don't have to do that?
Anonymous wrote:I would use it to move and buy a larger home in a good public school district. You will save a lot of money, have a better return on your home and live in a better community.
Anonymous wrote:I would use it to move and buy a larger home in a good public school district. You will save a lot of money, have a better return on your home and live in a better community.
Anonymous wrote:I get a large chunk of my pay in an annual bonus so I spend a lot of time figuring out what to do with windfalls. I always max out the tax advantaged savings accounts first--IRAs, 529s, etc. There may be a day where we don't need to do that, but I'd rather over save than under save. I'm 34 and I think it's smart to save as much as possible for college/retirement early because you don't know what the future holds. You can always cut back on savings if you feel you have more than enough.
If I were you, assuming you're maxing out your 401ks already, I'd put $11k into IRAs for you and your DH. Then, I'd do max $14k per child into a 529. It's a lot, but this is a one-time windfall. It may be the only time you set aside a significant amount of money in savings for them. Even though you're not worried about college funding, this is still a good use of money since the savings are tax advantaged. If you want to save more aggressively, you could each put $14k in a 529 for $28k per child. That's what we do with my annual bonuses right now.
After that, I'd pay off your DH's student loans. I wouldn't bother with yours since the interest rate is so low. Might as well take your time paying off that one. Then, get the car with $20k cash.
Assuming the net amount is $400k, you still have ~$330k (or $275k if you put $28k into the 529s) left. Shore up your cash savings first and then do the addition. If you have to finance a part of the addition, I'd go that route rather than blowing all the cash on a project that could be financed through a HELOC or construction loan at a low rate.
Regardless, if this comes through, it sounds like you'll have plenty for the addition you want and savings. Good luck!