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| *The Commerce Journal>>>Personal Finance |
I have a mortgage of 150 thousand should I pay if off? |
I'm leaving the Army in 6 mos and I will be a nurse in CA. I've had the loan for 14 years at 6% I have about 170,000 in the bank Pay off the house. Once you pay it off its yours. You'll save more money on the interest than you are on the tax deduction. Now you can take what was the house payment and invest everymonth. Keep 10 or 15k in a money market account for easy access in case of an emergency. uhmmm yea . why not and you can put money away for retirement No, the interest is tax deductible. Don't pay it off unless you have some really great investment that is going to pay you an after tax rate of return higher than the rate of the mortage times (1 plus the tax percentage.) No,first on your list is talk to tax representative about sheltering or divesting . There are mutuals (have to LOOK) that yield 10% or more, invest in your future. Keep the deduction your home gives you. Probably not, depending on your interest rate you can get a better return and you won't lose the tax deduction. Depends on your REAL interest rate and what you can get by investing. Also. one reason amy people (with real money) keep a mortgage is to protect against law suits, since, in the event of a judgment, the mortgage has to be paid off before the property title is clear. You really haven't offered a financial planner enough information to answer this question properly: Probably not. Stock index funds usually give a higher return so are a better investment than a house. If you have the money, ABSOLUTELY. Let's put it this way. If you can find an investment that will pay off in the long run, then that is where the money should go. If you check the charts, the stock market has gone up (mostly with some dips) since 1929. If you had invested $100 a month from the age of 23 to the age of 65 in most of the mutual funds out there, then you would be worth over $1,000,000 at the age of 65. I wouldn't put the whole 150 K into one investment, but I wouldn't be putting it into the mortgage either (of course you might want to pay it down some). uh duh pay it off before you credit goes down!! You would lose the home tax deduction if you pay off the lone, but by paying off the loan you would not have to pay taxes on the interest earned from the $150,000. |
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| Australia Taxes Small Business Renting & Real Estate Personal Finance Investing Insurance Credit |
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