I want to pay off my mortgage - talk me out of it
Monkeys - usually this time of year, I spend a lot of time thinking about my financial goals for the upcoming year. One thing that keeps coming to mind is to pay off my mortgage ASAP. 15 year at 3.375% with $130k outstanding.
Currently I’m 2nd year analyst in a product group at a BB (non NYC) and plan on going A2A this summer. Operating under the assumption of $35k sign on, and a bonus of ~$95k, that would be a cash inflow of ~$85k this summer. With that, and if I threw all of my personal FCF at the mortgage, I could probably be debt free in about 6 months.
I didn’t break into an analyst role until I was 25, so I’m 27 now. Have also been working full time since I was 19 and have a NW of $500k currently (Stocks, bonds, home equity).
Since I already have significant exposure to stocks and other assets I won’t miss out on a run up if I use the cash to pay down mortgage. Also, I have no idea what the future holds but equities seem over valued, seems like a tough time to be dumping sizable chunks of money into the market. All in all I would be 27, paid off house, ~$600-700k NW making Associate pay.
I understand the mathematical argument to keep the mortgage - but the thought of not having it is really compelling.
What do you think?
Go for it
If u want to do it for peace of mind, why not. The arguments we'd use to talk you out of it are the math ones, which you said you already understand. Not sure what you're looking for aside from an anecdotal story of some other guy who waited to pay off his mortgage and just so happened to have enough cash laying around to buy into GME and ride it to the moon, at which point its just an anecdote and I'd hope you wouldn't take it as a realistic opportunity.
Paying off mortgage = less debt and therefore no one you "owe"
Not paying off mortgage means more cash today that you could do whatever you want with, including investing in things that would out-earn your interest rate and result in more cash longterm. That's about it.
Edit: As anyone who has ever considered Apple's balance sheet knows, debt is not always a bad thing. Dave Ramsey just says so because half his listeners can't control themselves from buying a boat on a freshly minted credit card even though they have less than $500 in savings.
I agree with this. The math says there are better uses of your capital that return >3.5%. However, for me, the increased ability to take career risks due to lower financial stress is more than worth it.
If you can earn a return greater than 3.375%, which you should be able to?, that would be one argument against doing that.
I suggest you don't take advice from people who are only a few years out of school who've never had a mortgage (and probably no loans either).
As others have stated, paying off the mortgage isn't a math issue. It's about comfort, risk tolerance, peace of mind, etc. Have been at this a long time. Have discussed this with hundreds of clients. Really, everyone's issues are different. No right answer.
For me, as a younger person, I thought playing the arbitrage game was great. As an older person, I like the comfort of less debt. Easy to live well when you don't owe anyone anything.
It's a very personal issue.
Refinance instead and throw your cash into investments. Grow the pie instead
I would tell you to invest it and pay the interest but I didn’t do that so I get where you’re coming from. IMO, wish I didn’t pay off the debt, it was easily serviceable and I’d rather have the liquidity. Entirely your call though and you can’t go wrong either way.
.
Math vs. Emotion.
There is no wrong answer here. If you pay off your house, you will be in a position very few on this forum are. Only suggestion is speak to your financial advisor, and then get a second opinion after that.
how much equity do you already have in your house?
I am a dumb young guy but I would probably pay off the mortgage asap for peace of mind purposes, lower monthly expenses, unless a huge amount of your net worth is already in the house.
Risk-free 3.4% return is pretty damn good these days. It’s about what investors are (implicitly) yielding on a lot of blue chip stocks, long-term.
Qui blanditiis repellat natus repellat est voluptatum. Nulla dolor quia quaerat quos non eaque. Id quae similique voluptas consequuntur et occaecati. Magni voluptatibus magni ut laboriosam.
Quidem consequuntur in debitis magnam aspernatur vel non eveniet. Eligendi ratione et et voluptas aut. Laboriosam cumque consectetur deserunt deleniti. Accusantium harum doloribus aperiam vel sed qui quia qui.
Saepe quaerat aut culpa et aliquid sed. Consequatur facilis laudantium voluptates dignissimos laborum. Sit ex magni quaerat nihil quo quas deleniti. Culpa a rerum quasi laboriosam mollitia dolor vel. Voluptas consectetur velit officiis qui. Sit aut at nam sunt. Praesentium laudantium quae ex asperiores ea.
See All Comments - 100% Free
WSO depends on everyone being able to pitch in when they know something. Unlock with your email and get bonus: 6 financial modeling lessons free ($199 value)
or Unlock with your social account...