Getting Personal
Payoff Mortgage Early?
Question: I plan to retire most likely sometime next year. I have a 30 year fixed at about 6.5%. I'm 5 years into the payments. If I have the liquidity to do so, should I pay off my mortgage?
Answer: One of my favorite financial advisors, Henry "Bud" Hebeler, recently sent me his answer to this question. I've answered this question on the blog so I thought I'd like to share his response to give you another perspective.
Bud was president of Boeing Aerospace, and when he retired he was disgusted with much of the financial advice offered to future and current retirees. He now runs a website--www.analyzenow.com--that's full of good advice.
Here's his answer: The technical answer is that IF the after-tax earnings on your investments is more than the after-tax interest on the debt, you shouldn't pay down the mortgage.
The problem is that you have to guess at returns over the next 20 to 30 years and hope that there are no huge market drops. Also, you have to guess whether you'll be able to deduct mortgage interest over a long period. For those reasons, many financial planners believe you should pay off the mortgage early. I think you also have to consider the amount of money you have left after paying off the loan, and whether you could get as good a deal on a new loan should you ever need one considering such things as the future interest rates and paying closing costs again. You might want to make a side-by-side comparison of your two alternatives using one scenario starting in 1948 (a very good year to retire) and then changing to a 1965 (a very bad year to retire) comparison using the Dynamic program on www.analyzenow.com.
When things are uncertain, I'm often in favor of a compromise. Perhaps you could pay off half of your loan or accelerate payments should you be able to do this without loan penalties.
I like the compromise idea. Too much of personal finance is divided into an either/or construction when compromise is often the best solution.
Looking for guidance on your personal finances? I'm taking your questions and answering one here each day. Just click on the "Ask a question" link to tell me what's on your mind.
Chris Farrell Marketplace Money personal finance guru
Latest Posts
Archives
| S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | |||||
| 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |
| 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 |
| 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 |
| 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 |
| 31 |
Categories
- Banking
- Books
- Budgeting
- Charitable giving
- Credit cards
- Credit report, credit score
- Debt
- Dollar exchange rate
- Economy
- Estate planning
- Financial planner
- Housing
- Insurance
- Investing
- Stocks
- Kids and money
- Mutual funds
- Paying for college
- Retirement
- Retirement savings
- 401k
- Bonds
- IRAs
- Money markets
- Mutual funds
- Savings
- Scams
- Social Security
- Taxes
sponsor
Latest Comments
- Gifts (2)
- Dave wrote: One followup to Chris' answer. The questioner asked if the ... [read]
- Chris Farrell wrote: That's right. Thanks.... [read]
- Recession? Or Not? (1)
- jim wrote: Thanks for answering my question!... [read]
- Debt Trouble and Reverse Mortgage (1)
- Eric wrote: Seems like you need to get a budget and make some cuts in yo... [read]
- Prepay Credit Card? (1)
- Raymond wrote: American Express cards in South Africa do pay interest on cr... [read]
- Roth-IRAs (2)
- Dave wrote: To expand on Chris' comments, the contribution limit applies... [read]
- Chris Farrell wrote: Good point. Thanks. Chris... [read]
sponsor






Comments (3)
I agree with the compromise plan. I had an extra $20,000 burning a hole in my pocket, so I used $10,000 to pay down my mortgage and I used the other $10,000 to buy a total market index mutual fund.
Another strategy is to hang onto all the "cash" in savings or safer investments until you have enough to pay off the mortgage all at once. Paying ahead a little may save you interest, but it leaves you still owing the same monthly mortgage payment. If you save up enough to pay off the mortgage, then you will have no monthly payment just as you lose your savings account...but then again you won't need nearly as much money to support yourself through any hard times.
I have a 10.66 years to go on a 15 year fixed rate mortgage at 4.875 %. I am in the 25% tax bracket. Current payoff is $87,000. My financial guys tell me I can expect about 8% pretax return on my investments.
Should I pay off the mortgage or invest the $87K.
What is the best use of the $87K just in financial terms?