Pay it off or invest?
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I know that’s supposed to be the answer but compounded interest? At her age? I would put at least half into the IRA.
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I'd get rid of the debt, too, and then maybe invest the money she's currently using to pay off the debt each month. That way, she doesn't feel any difference, but she's investing rather than paying off.
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@george-k said in Pay it off or invest?:
She's also getting about a 10% increase in salary, so that's another good thing.
Cha-ching! Nice going.
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@george-k said in Pay it off or invest?:
She's also getting about a 10% increase in salary, so that's another good thing.
Is she able to pay her bills on what she is currently making? If so, use all or part of the raise for investing/savings. If she doesn't have three months take home salary in a readily accessible account, save. If she has it saved, invest.
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@klaus said in Pay it off or invest?:
We owe money for our house, but the interest rate is so low that I rather invest surplus money on the stock market.
Same here. We're at 2.75%, so we could pay more off but are deciding only to add a little to each mortgage payment.
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@horace said in Pay it off or invest?:
It’s easy to justify investing if the return is higher than the loan interest. But people fine debt stressful so it becomes a quality of life issue. Minimizing stress doesn’t always maximize expected money.
Agreed, aside from our mortgage (mentioned above) we avoid any other debt lasting longer than 30 days (e.g., pay of credit card each month). Something about not having the debt, like you said, that is good....even if it's not a perfect financial move.
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@89th said in Pay it off or invest?:
@klaus said in Pay it off or invest?:
We owe money for our house, but the interest rate is so low that I rather invest surplus money on the stock market.
Same here. We're at 2.75%, so we could pay more off but are deciding only to add a little to each mortgage payment.
We pay 1% interest.
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@axtremus said in Pay it off or invest?:
@renauda said in Pay it off or invest?:
Pay off debt.
+1, assuming the interest rate is greater than zero.
I am not familiar with any consumer debt that accumulates 0% interest over time. On the other hand, can people in the US write off medical expense debt and interest from their personal income taxes? If so, that could possibly make investing the money more attractive in the long run.
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@renauda said in Pay it off or invest?:
can people in the US write off medical expense debt and interest from their personal income taxes?
Only if it exceeds 7.5% of the adjusted gross income. And then, only the portion above that threshold is deductible.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=For tax returns filed in 2021, taxpayers can deduct qualified, unreimbursed medical expenses that are more than 7.5% of their 2020 adjusted gross income. So if your adjusted gross income is $40,000, anything beyond the first $3,000 of medical bills — or 7.5% of your AGI — could be deductible.
That means if you had $10,000 in medical bills, $7,000 of them could be deductible.
The 7.5% threshold used to be 10%, but legislative changes at the end of 2019 lowered it.