Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When our oldest was in late elementary school, we did the math and realized that our house would be paid off when he was in his 3rd year of college. By adding just a bit to each monthly payment, we accelerated it so that it was paid off halfway through his senior year of high school. That is freeing up a ton of cash flow during his college years.
So you paid off the 3% mortgage instead of putting it into investments that could earn a lot more than 3%. Yay!
Yes and the price we paid for college dropped from 95k to 35-45k per kid for 8 years. Yay indeed.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. We are definitely considering in state but there are a handful of "dream" schools that are oos. Not a lot of them but a handful. If DS gets in, we'd like to send him with as little pain as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We paid off our mortgage.
Assuming you're not in a house poor scenario and can afford to spread out your mortgage payments over time.....I don't think a financial planner would recommend you paying off a low interest mortgage loan in advance vs investing the same money (or some of it) in either a 529 or retirement product (IRA/TSP/401k/403b) that will likely grow at a higher rate than the mortgage and incur zero capital gains over time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When our oldest was in late elementary school, we did the math and realized that our house would be paid off when he was in his 3rd year of college. By adding just a bit to each monthly payment, we accelerated it so that it was paid off halfway through his senior year of high school. That is freeing up a ton of cash flow during his college years.
So you paid off the 3% mortgage instead of putting it into investments that could earn a lot more than 3%. Yay!
Yes and the price we paid for college dropped from 95k to 35-45k per kid for 8 years. Yay indeed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lowest paid parent quits working for four years. Will make a huge difference in the net price calculation!
Unless the coa is way more than that parent's income, this doesn't make that much sense, IMO. You are losing out on that extra income, plus it will be harder for that parent to go back into the workplace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When our oldest was in late elementary school, we did the math and realized that our house would be paid off when he was in his 3rd year of college. By adding just a bit to each monthly payment, we accelerated it so that it was paid off halfway through his senior year of high school. That is freeing up a ton of cash flow during his college years.
So you paid off the 3% mortgage instead of putting it into investments that could earn a lot more than 3%. Yay!
Anonymous wrote:we didn't really have it laying around. we lost our two remaining parents. so all 4 parents gone and we had some inheritance.
we've never made 250k. our HHI is about 140k. we do have two 529s that are about 100k each do to great returns over last 15 years. so I guess we saved more on less income than you did.
if you make 250k, you can afford a new roof
Anonymous wrote:We paid off our mortgage.
Anonymous wrote:we shifted 600k of assets into non reportable. mostly paying down our mortgage, but also wrapping up a long list of needs: new roof, added an ADU, did dental work, redid driveway, maxed retirement, updated a bunch of legal work like trusts, etc.
Anonymous wrote:When our oldest was in late elementary school, we did the math and realized that our house would be paid off when he was in his 3rd year of college. By adding just a bit to each monthly payment, we accelerated it so that it was paid off halfway through his senior year of high school. That is freeing up a ton of cash flow during his college years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We paid off our mortgage.
This is sound advice, OP! You can pay off the mortgage and also when the time comes, see if you can get merit at private universities
Seems short-sighted to do that when most expensive schools will expect you to tap home equity to help pay for college. Now you'll just be taking out a home equity loan, probably at a higher interest rate than your mortgage.
Anonymous wrote:Community college to in-state. Your kid will be fine, and you desperately need to learn to stop "keeping up appearances."
Anonymous wrote:So paying off things like car and consumer debt is already done. What other financial planning did you think made an actual difference for families that are full pay oos but will really struggle to be full pay.