0.00% Debt, Anyone? (Page 2)
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Sneaky Slow ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() tkbslc - 2008-02-20 12:04 PM I'm just going to sum up my opinion: No house payment, good. Lots of money in savings, good. Sacrificing savings/retirement to pay off house early, questionable. X2 Good post. |
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Expert ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() We are down to a Mortgage and one car.... Hoping to have the house paid off in 16 years...... just in time for the first of my two kids to goto college!!!! Can't even imagine college cost in 16 years so we will need to be debt free..... However, since Trixie seems to have a secret CC i may have to question my wife on this as well, she is very sneaky...... but then again i have a secret slush (tri-fund) as well..... |
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Buttercup ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() tkbslc - 2008-02-20 12:04 PM I'm just going to sum up my opinion: No house payment, good. Lots of money in savings, good. Sacrificing savings/retirement to pay off house early, questionable. And, of course, you don't have to sacrifice savings/retirement in order to payoff a 15 year mortgage in 15 years. You can do both - pay off mortgage AND put money into your 401k, savings, etc. |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() I am almost there. No CC Debt, 2 cars that are paid for. (An older car, and a newer one purchased with a 2 year loan) I have a 10 year mortgage on my house that I refi'd into 4 years ago (Fixed 4.25%) and have been accelerating. My savings/investmets are also growing at a modest rate. (With monthly contributions) Plan on being there is all goes well by 2012. |
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Sneaky Slow ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() WaterDog66 - 2008-02-20 12:21 PM I am almost there. No CC Debt, 2 cars that are paid for. (An older car, and a newer one purchased with a 2 year loan) I have a 10 year mortgage on my house that I refi'd into 4 years ago (Fixed 4.25%) and have been accelerating. My savings/investmets are also growing at a modest rate. (With monthly contributions) Plan on being there is all goes well by 2012. Just a question... what's your reason for accelerating a 4.25 Fixed mortgage? Is is financial, or psychological? It can't be financial, can it? N.B. Not criticizing if it is more of a mental reason for wanting to have it paid off, that's cool, just wondering. |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() newleaf - 2008-02-20 9:42 AM Just a question... what's your reason for accelerating a 4.25 Fixed mortgage? Is is financial, or psychological? It can't be financial, can it? N.B. Not criticizing if it is more of a mental reason for wanting to have it paid off, that's cool, just wondering. Well, my realtor was telling me I was a fool to ever pay off a loan like this since it is just about the cheapest money you can borrow. The thing of it is, I have no other debt this is where debt service goes. He seemed to think the best approach was to use the extra money I am sending to the Mortgage to add to the money I already invest every month but that did not pass the smell test for me. Why would I invest money at some long term rate of return and end up paying interest on it for then next 6 years. Granted, I would still be in the black on paper, but the long term economic gain would be offset by real interest payments now. Seemed like a better bet for me to just pay down the mortgage. I have some large expenses coming up in about 10 years and it would be very nice to just pay out of pocket for it instead of dipping into savings/investments to pay for it. (even though some of my investments are earmarked to pay for these expenses) |
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Sneaky Slow ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() WaterDog66 - 2008-02-20 12:51 PM newleaf - 2008-02-20 9:42 AM Just a question... what's your reason for accelerating a 4.25 Fixed mortgage? Is is financial, or psychological? It can't be financial, can it? N.B. Not criticizing if it is more of a mental reason for wanting to have it paid off, that's cool, just wondering. Well, my realtor was telling me I was a fool to ever pay off a loan like this since it is just about the cheapest money you can borrow. The thing of it is, I have no other debt this is where debt service goes. He seemed to think the best approach was to use the extra money I am sending to the Mortgage to add to the money I already invest every month but that did not pass the smell test for me. Why would I invest money at some long term rate of return and end up paying interest on it for then next 6 years. Granted, I would still be in the black on paper, but the long term economic gain would be offset by real interest payments now. Seemed like a better bet for me to just pay down the mortgage. I have some large expenses coming up in about 10 years and it would be very nice to just pay out of pocket for it instead of dipping into savings/investments to pay for it. (even though some of my investments are earmarked to pay for these expenses) Fair enough... also, the gap between the 4.25 you are paying now and the 7 or 8% you'd gain over the long-term is narrower than that, when you figure in the mortgage interest tax deduction and capital gains taxes. |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Not debt free (yet) but working towards that goal. As for Mortgage versus investment. For most of us, a mortgage is our cheapest opportunity to borrow money. To the extent housing debt prevents other forms of installment loans (car loans, credit cards, etc.) it isn't too bad. The current mortgage tornado reinforces the point that unsustainable housing debt isn't good either. The compounding works both ways, and as long as your investments can provide a greater risk-adjusted return than pre-paying the mortgage, invest (that's the whole principle behind bonds, borrow money at a rate lower than you can invest in your business). |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Well, 4 years ago I had $22,000 in CC debt. I had that and a car loan. I was drowning in CC payments. So, I made a plan to pay it off. First I closed out a 401K. Yes, I took a huge hit and lost about $8,000 doing it... but paying off high interest debt and being able to live off my paycheck was more important. I paid off $10,000 of my CC debt with that. Once that was done... well for the last 4 years I have been putting anywhere from $100 to $800 a month towards my CC. With my tax return and 2 more payments my CC debut will be ZERO as of April 2008! OK, let me tell you a secret... you have to move your CC debt to a CC card that is offering 0% interest for x amount of months. Then, you put a note ON the CC letting you know WHEN that offer is up. 2 months before the offer is up (put a reminder in your phone if you have to)... you go looking for another CC company offering the same deal. Then you balance transfer. This is how I paid off my $12,000 worth of CC debut with 0% interest! Otherwise... I still have a car payment. I will always have a car payment. I like driving a nice car. But, I also make sure that I don't buy a car that has a high monthly payment... aka: a car over $22,000. That way, I can get low monthly payments (around $350) and put more towards it as I please. |
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Veteran![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() tkbslc - 2008-02-20 9:04 AM I'm just going to sum up my opinion: No house payment, good. Lots of money in savings, good. Sacrificing savings/retirement to pay off house early, questionable.
x3 Yes, Dave Ramsey can be a little extreme, but sometimes it's the extreme that's needed to wake someone up. We live in a culture that not only wants to keep up with the Jones', but pass them by and leave them in our dust. As a society, we have the 1st, 2nd and 3rd mortgages to prove it, along with an abundance of credit card debt. Rant over... The best thing I've gotten from Dave is to live within my means. We all need to get past the point (myself included, and I'm working on it!) where we measure ourselves by what we have. Got a Lexus in the driveway or a 1973 AMC Pacer? If we have our health, family, etc. does it really matter? Kudos to everyone who's in a debt free state. Beyond the financial implications, I know from personal experience that there's an emotional and psychological component as well - just like a great swim, bike or run, it FEELS GOOD to not be in debt. |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() The best thing I've gotten from Dave is to live within my means. We all need to get past the point (myself included, and I'm working on it!) where we measure ourselves by what we have. Got a Lexus in the driveway or a 1973 AMC Pacer? If we have our health, family, etc. does it really matter? Yep, that's the key. If you can't pay for it with cash then you can't have it. Of course, I don't follow then when it comes to cars. ![]() Otherwise, I use to charge trips, charge my hair appointments, clothing, etc. Now days, I don't charge anything. If I can't afford it, I don't get it. |
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Master ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() OK, let me tell you a secret... you have to move your CC debt to a CC card that is offering 0% interest for x amount of months. Then, you put a note ON the CC letting you know WHEN that offer is up. 2 months before the offer is up (put a reminder in your phone if you have to)... you go looking for another CC company offering the same deal. Then you balance transfer. This is how I paid off my $12,000 worth of CC debut with 0% interest! Congrats on getting your debt down and using your head! I've got a bigger secret than that although the opportunity probably won't occur again. About four years ago the CC companies started offering cash advances at 0%, with no fees, until the balance is paid off. The main catch was that if you missed a payment the interest rate would rise to some ridiculous number. The secondary catch was that all payments apply to lowest rate first so if you made new charges to the card, you'd pay the outrageous rate on the new purchases. So I took out as many as offered, put the cards in a safe, and put the money into interest bearing accounts. Literally, free money. Edited by breckview 2008-02-20 12:41 PM |
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![]() No CC (thanks to the wife who is diligent... I'd prolly let it slide No car payment - Feb 08 was the last one (wife has a 0% car loan which we could pay off, but that's pointless) No mortgage (which I rue every April 15 No student loans (paid off with family help) No family $$ owed Edited by ChrisM 2008-02-20 12:49 PM |
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Expert ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() KSH - 2008-02-20 12:26 PM Well, 4 years ago I had $22,000 in CC debt. I had that and a car loan. I was drowning in CC payments. So, I made a plan to pay it off. First I closed out a 401K. Yes, I took a huge hit and lost about $8,000 doing it... but paying off high interest debt and being able to live off my paycheck was more important. I paid off $10,000 of my CC debt with that. Once that was done... well for the last 4 years I have been putting anywhere from $100 to $800 a month towards my CC. With my tax return and 2 more payments my CC debut will be ZERO as of April 2008! OK, let me tell you a secret... you have to move your CC debt to a CC card that is offering 0% interest for x amount of months. Then, you put a note ON the CC letting you know WHEN that offer is up. 2 months before the offer is up (put a reminder in your phone if you have to)... you go looking for another CC company offering the same deal. Then you balance transfer. This is how I paid off my $12,000 worth of CC debut with 0% interest! Otherwise... I still have a car payment. I will always have a car payment. I like driving a nice car. But, I also make sure that I don't buy a car that has a high monthly payment... aka: a car over $22,000. That way, I can get low monthly payments (around $350) and put more towards it as I please. wow, that must be a kickazz bike, what did you buy for $22k??? |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() wow, that must be a kickazz bike, what did you buy for $22k??? What didn't I buy? The sad thing is that I don't really have anything to SHOW for all that debt. I can't point to my living room and say, "I bought that on a CC". Of course, my ex being out of work 75% of the time we were together didn't help things. There were many times that I charged groceries. |
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Master ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() F....no It's all about using OPM to create more assets. And besides a little fear in crashing financial is good for the entrepreneurial soul. Though some days I feel like a hamster on a wheel with my wife cranking the speed. Edited by Jackemy 2008-02-20 2:05 PM |
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Master ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Was almost there and decided to refinance a year or so ago and use the money to invest. Haven't had a car payment in a few years but deposit the payment we were making into a MMA monthly so when that day comes we'll pay cash. Student loans done for years and no CC as we use them for everything and pay off monthly. We're good at staying within a budget even if it is a loose one that allows us the freedom to not do without what we consider important. My wife also rocks and I mean rocks at the Supermarket as we pay for less than 50% of what we buy every week. It stuff like that which provides that extra pocket change that makes me smile. |
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![]() My wife also rocks and I mean rocks at the Supermarket as we pay for less than 50% of what we buy every week. Dude, stealing is not the answer |
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Master ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() ChrisM - 2008-02-20 1:28 PM My wife also rocks and I mean rocks at the Supermarket as we pay for less than 50% of what we buy every week. Dude, stealing is not the answer nevermind, it wasn't that funny
Edited by tkbslc 2008-02-20 2:57 PM |
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![]() tkbslc - 2008-02-20 12:56 PM ChrisM - 2008-02-20 1:28 PM My wife also rocks and I mean rocks at the Supermarket as we pay for less than 50% of what we buy every week. Dude, stealing is not the answer nevermind, it wasn't that funny
I saw it... comedy gold, man! |
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Master ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Just the house is left. I'm trying to have that debt gone in the next 10.5 months.
Dave is pretty cool. I just started listening to him. |
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Elite ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Nope... Just starting. School loans... Just mine... My wife is clear. My APR is a heafty 3.25%. Not really worried about it. Bought a house/condo... 30yr fixed, APR 5.825%... Again, not really worried about it CC debt... Yep... A little worried about because of the wasted cash flow that could be working for us. I am hoping to get them paid off in a year or two. No car loans... Maybe in a year or two when the card is paid off. By the way... I thought that using CCs to pay off other CCs and closing them without a strong non-revolving credit line, like a house or a car, will destroy your credit rating. Maybe I'm wrong. |
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Expert ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Yes, I am on the DR plan too. I have paid off 25K in debt so far and have about 17k left and then a piece of land I am tring to sell. I can't wait to call in and screem "we're debt free". If the land sells, we should be done with the debt by the end of the year. Freedom, here we come. Never going to use a CC again and never getting a loan for anything again. I love not having payments. |
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Expert ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() condorman - 2008-02-20 10:18 AM There is some value to specific types of loans. While we were told in "Hamlet" - neither a creditor nor a lender be, there is taxable benefits. I just scored a huge tax advantage paying interest on my mortgage. If I had paid cash for a house, we'd still be in a one-bedroom apartment saving up for a double-wide trailer. I also reaped a serious financial windfall by placing some $$ on one card with a 1/9% APR and taking a 5% rewards. Not to mention, I've just phased out the tax benefits of my student loans and they'll be paid off shortly. My goal has never been to be out of debt, but rather my goal has always been to have a positive personal balance sheet, while minimizing any interest amounts I pay. (e.g. I have no problem taking a zero interest car loan) Tax advantage by having a mortgage. For example in a 25% tax bracket, a loan of 200k, and interest of 5%. That is 10k interest per year. You are sending the bank 10k to save 2.5k becuase you get a deduction. Does not make much sense to me. You can give the $ to a non-profit and get the same tax deduction yet not have the loan or make the bank rich. |
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Expert ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() tkbslc - 2008-02-20 12:04 PM I'm just going to sum up my opinion: No house payment, good. Lots of money in savings, good. Sacrificing savings/retirement to pay off house early, questionable.
Dave Ramsey does NOT recomend to pay house off before saving for retirement. Baby Step 4 is 15% in retirment and Baby Step 6 is pay off the house. He often says he does not want someone to retire with a 200k paid for house but have no money in retirement and that is why the baby steps are in the specific order. Edited by mgmoore7 2008-02-20 3:43 PM |
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