I agree. They can get back into debt if they don’t like being debt free. This yr I put 75k towards my principle. Was at 242k dec 2020 and now oct 2021 down to 167k. Gazelle intensity. Smiles.
The positive reward is that you don't have to worry about losing your job in the future after paying off your mortgage. You will always be able to support yourself flipping burgers at McDonald's because you don't have to pay for shelter which is the largest living cost people have and the main reason why people work to begin with. Even if you invest and earn a higher yield, if you lose your job and cannot get a replacement at the same level of income soon enough there is a high likelyhood you may loose everything you have. The exception to this are high skilled blue collar professionals like truck drivers, mechanics and registered nurses etc. but most people are not in those types of industries. If you have to pay for housing costs jobs basically control and you could even say own your life. Removing the source of your need to have a job allows for personal freedom and moreso future financial freedom from the burden of having to make sure you can pay for a roof over your head
Back in the day, when I purchased my first home to live-in; that was Miami in the early 1990s, first mortgages with rates of 8 to 9% and 9% to 10% were typical. People will have to accept the possibility that we won't ever return to 3%. If sellers must sell, home prices will have to decline, and lower evaluations will follow. Pretty sure I'm not alone in my chain of thoughts.
If anything, it'll get worse. Very soon, affordable housing will no longer be affordable. So anything anyone want to do, I will advise they do it now because the prices today will look like dips tomorrow. Until the Fed clamps down even further, I think we're going to see hysteria due to rampant inflation. You can't halfway rip the band-aid off.
consider moving your money from the housing market to financial markets or gold due to high mortgage rates and tough guidelines. Home prices may need to drop significantly before things stabilize. Seeking advice from a financial advisor who understands the market could be helpful in making the right decisions.
Carol Vivian Constable is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment..
Appreciate this recommendation, hopefully I can get some insight to where the market is headed and strategies to beat the downtrend with when I hear back from Carol.
I paid off my mortgage last November, 13 years early. Not a day goes by where I question that decision. That was the best choice ever. True homeownership is priceless. And yes, of course you still have to pay taxes and home owners insurance. That’s not a big deal when you’re considering the big picture. That’s like complaining that you still have to pay for gas or insurance when you buy a car. 🙄🙄
I paid mine off fifteen years early. I was laid off from my job four years ago and found another job that was not desirable. I quit it after a year. Never thought of retiring earlier than my full retirement age 67 ( I was 56 when I quit). Because my goal was not only to pay off my mortgage early I was an aggressive saver contributing to retirement accounts and my emergency fund. I have decided to retire now as I have my investments laddered. I would not have been able to retire had I not had a game plan to pay my mortgage earlier freeing me up from the most expensive liability.
Congratulations to you.... I'm still toddler stage so that is a big goal I'm working towards.... But a least you have the biggest DEBT paid off unless you have a lot in student loans....
My wife and I's monthly payment was $2415 month. We would pay an extra $500 a month towards the principal. We currently just refinanced to get a lower interest rate and to get off of PMI. Our new monthly payment is $2918 a month. We plan on still paying $3700 a month but are now going to do bi-monthly payments.
Try making the payments quarterly, in addition to adding, a payment each month and watch how fast the payments begin to drop on your amortization chart. I've got one more year after starting about a year ago. The timing of the payments is everything. This is the only thing that they all leave out when doing the videos.
Instead of extra payments, I suspect you would be better off putting the $782 per month into shares of Apple and Amazon. The video more or less describes how you can get out of being a debt slave When you have cash you have options. Smart people hold on to cash. They don't instantly shove it toward debt. Once it is used to pay on the debt, it is no longer accessible.
One part of this vid that I do like is the idea of not taking on a large debt in the first place. I think there should be a balance between the amount of debt you incur and the amount of cash you can invest. I would rather have a $1000 house payment and $1000 going into stocks than a $2000 house payment and no stocks. If you have cash and you’re confused I will suggest you contact a finance advisor
Sharon Ann Meny, just check her out. It's better to hire a skilled financial planner especially if you're not one yourself. I hired one after my retirement pension took a hit in 2021 April due to the crash.
Peace of mind for sure. Also, people don't think about when you no longer have a mortgage you're potentially gaining more time. If I don't have a mortgage, that means I don't have to work as much, and not working will allow you to spend more time on things you'd like to do instead of a 9-5 job. More time with friends, more time with family. Sometimes I feel people don't realize that time is the most important thing.
I paid up all my mortgages in 2yrs while working with a Financial Adviser. I’m 50 and my husband 54 we are both retired with over $3 million in net worth and no debts. We got to realize that the secret to financial freedom is making better investments.
I read a book that talked about having a financial adviser. Well, Credits to *ROCHELLE DUNGCA-SCHREIBER,* she saw me through the process. You can glance her name up on the internet and verify her yourself. she has years of financial market experience....
Indeed, The quickest way to make your first millions is to invest directly with an expert that is trustworthy and has made a name and individual billionaires.. I'm surprised you know her too
H Florence, I'm super inspired but your comment. Would you be willing to share some of your lessons learned? "Teach a man to fish, feed him for a lifetime." 😀🙏
From my experience, the people against me paying off my mortgage early are people who are basically living paycheck to paycheck and don't have the money to even make extra payments, much less ask the bank for an "early payoff" amount. Why invest in an economy running on a dollar that has lost 94% of its purchasing power since the 70's? I'm 3 years from my goal and there is literally nothing that would stop me from paying off my mortgage 25 years early.
My last payment goes in at midnight tomorrow, 8 years early after 15 years of nothing but financial chaos (2007 recession hit me hard, and what followed after didn't help either), I'm already breathing easier.
@@michaelkeudel8770 Congrats! I have made 2 principal payments a month for the last 8 years...I just made my January 2031 payment.....if I can keep it up, I will be done in 7 years, cutting my 30 year loan into 15 years, and saving $60k in interest.
Dollar losing value=higher inflation helps you if have debt. It reduces the value of the loan. I don’t understand if having the amount you would need to payoff the house in investments, what the difference would be compared to paying off your house. If you needed to pay the mortgage off you can do so quickly. In the long term, your investments will grow quicker than your mortgage rate.
@@mitsospiros List the investments that people should invest in? And I don't mean generic like stocks, real estate, etc. I mean tell me the name of that stock and how much dividends it's paid in the last 5 years. If it's real estate, tell me exactly where that property is located and who to contact to buy it. People are telling you all that they have paid off their mortgage and folks on the sidelines telling them they should have invested. What if they had instead invested that money in ROKU stocks? They would be up sh*t creek right now
@@KnowledgeSeeker78491 mortgages are typically 15 or 30 years. Any index fund tracking the S&P 500 will certainly do better than any mortgage interest rate during that time period.
I love owning my home outright. My mortgage kept me locked into a career that I hated, but now I have hope for the future. Honestly, it never felt like my house as long as the bank held the deed.
I am more concerned about the government taking the house than the mortgage company. Government gets to act above the law more than even the darn bank!
I cleared my mortgage in ten years, saved for the next three and when the credit crunch happened I put down deposits on a few more properties. Fast forward 13 years I've been out of work for five months now, my properties have nearly doubled in that time and I'm saving more than I'm spending. Best thing I've ever done.
My wife and I bought our house at the age of 23 in 2001 paid it off in 2013. Best thing I ever did. My son was born 3 months early at 1lb 4oz with LOTS of medical problems. Since we didn’t have that huge mortgage payment it let her stay home with him and take care of all his needs. Between our house, investments and property we are almost millionaires right now. Our home has more then doubled in value since we bought it
Got one paid off two years ago and now less than two years away from paying the second. The best part is the flexibility and freedom I will gain from it. Life is a lot easier when you you have the ability to say “nah” when a job is crushing your soul. Pack light, travel often, and never let the things you own, own you.
COngrats, but you could have bought 3-4 smaller rental properties and used the rental income to have no housing costs on your primary, plus end up owning all the properties, plus you could borrow against them if needed. We are at record low iteretes rates
@@Jim.Jim.32 while true, that also means I carry the risk of having 3-4 properties whose mortgages I couldn’t have paid if the US government removed my ability to evict problem tenants. That very thing just happened to landlords all around the country. I value my freedom of movement more than max ROI. Different strokes for different folks.
Yup, I agree with JJ!! The best feeling I have was paying off my mortgage. That leaves me $1600 a month for building a nest egg. If for whatever I reason lose my job, I still have a roof over my head and much less stress. If I want to skip putting that money into a nest egg for a month I don't have stress. If I want to use that $1600 for a trip, I take it. That extra $1600 feels like a nice fat raise with much less stress indeed.
Interesting. When I retired and sold my house I was able to buy my current house for cash. Some friends told me I should take out a mortgage and invest that money. But I never seriously considered doing that, and I must say, I sleep very well at night knowing the house is paid for!
The returns on having a paid off mortgage are more than anything you can make in the market.... If the economy crashes or lose your job. It's nice to tell the family we don't have to worry about foreclosure.
@@rayrayray not sure why you're bragging about not being able to do basic math yourself. I'd rather not give my bank well over $50K+ in mortgage interest just because I wasn't born to rich parents who could offer to loan me $200K+ interest free. Not everyone has financially stable parents to leech off of.
@@kawaiiphase7829 someone doesn’t understand how to calculate interest and forecasted gains. I suggest maybe taking a basic investing class or highschool level Econ class. 🙂
@@rayrayray - What the basic math does not take into account is human nature. Very, very few people have the discipline to stick to the investing plan where it makes sense to keep the mortgage and invest the money that they would have used to pay it off early. Most people would perhaps start investing, but then decide that the extra money would be "better spent" on lease payments for a BMW. The same with people that get a tax refund. If they adjusted their withholding to get that money in their paycheck each week, that small amount would get spent on Starbucks and beer. You may know the math and have the discipline. But the average person retires with well under $100k saved. Going into retirement with a mortgage would be a disaster for them. It is best to pay it off.
I'm turning 60 this year. We own 6 income properties. Yes there was a lot of sacrifice to make that happen. You're on the right path. The freedom from stress, from debt and the Idea that you're not a slave to the banks, is just so soothing and calming. You become more peaceful in yourself when you can channel your energy to things that you choose, not things that debt dictates. I hope many folks are inspired by your story and they too break the bonds of debt.
@@davysmith8569 I'd rather let my investments help pay my house off over paying it off from my paycheck. But I have a stable job so it's a little different than self employed people
It's amazing how few people are supportive of paying off a mortgage. We did it to get out of the cycle of owing other people money. Feels fantastic to no longer be held to someone else's demands every month. Making financial decisions on my own terms with my entire paycheck is priceless.
They don't want to give up their lifestyle. I'm making the assumption that most people have to cut back in order to afford the additional payment money.
yep. knowing whatever happens you will never loose your home. we paid ours off in 2017. since then we live like royalty. can buy almost anything we want when we want
Totally agree with you, I have in the past had things go downhill for me and was running around looking for money to pay my mortgage. Now that I find myself in a position to pay off my mortgage early it was a no brainer. We don't know what will happen to us in the future, so in my opinion pay off your mortgage, you can always invest money you gain from no mortgage
I made the last payment on my house January 29, 2021 and you don't need to tell me why you don't regret it. That sure does free up a considerable amount of money. My investment advisor actually told me NOT to pay off my mortgage because at that point it isn't anything but a "dead" asset. I fired the guy. Great video!
Why would a investment advisor tell you not to pay off your mortgage? 🤔 Is it because he feels you won’t have the money to invest with him do to paying your mortgage off early. 🤔 Yea you did the right thing by firing that guy! 👏🏾💯💯💯
Mine is being paid off at the end of the month! 6 years into a 15 year note! It’s been a struggle but worth it 100% My problem with people that say it’s smarter to invest and keep the mortgage is that they don’t..they just keep the mortgage around, invest minimally, and end up wasting away that money on things like cars/toys, and never really invest anyway.. I decided to pay off the mortgage first in a hurry, then I can set my investments where I want them afterwards, and any income on top of that is mine to do as I please. The peace of mind know that you own your house is more comforting to me than watching market numbers go up, or even worse, down, while still making a house payment..
I paid mine off at 32. It was one of the best decisions I ever made. I don't sweat work - and learning how to save that amount of money was a good lesson in life. People that say that they would rather invest - are usually not investing that amount - that money is usually wasted on toys. You will always need a place to sleep so get it over with, pay it off and move on with life.
I buy 7k of stock per month with my salary. I day trade with margin and made 25k last quarter, but there are taxes on those quarterly gains, so day trading is lame. I don't recommend it unless there are sure trades. Most people lose on day trading.
You can't out trade a bull run when you are holding hundreds of thousands in a company, plus long-term gains are lower. So, buying a good company with lots of money and holding is the best deal. Day trading is okay, but few are great.
My wife and I did the same for the sole reason of safety net for our family. Same with credit cards and loans. Thank God we did! My wife lost her job due to covid this year and doing the numbers there is no way we could cover our expenses and would likely be homeless. Pay off large debt, save and invest. Free yourselves from the banking system.
I paid of my mortgage as soon as i had the money to do so. This was the only debt i have ever had and am a person who is quite happy to wait until i have the money to buy something. No need to ever be in debt and if something goes wrong and i loose my job then i still have a home.
Exactly! A lot of times when you have to save to buy something that you "think" that you really want you find out when you then have the money you really didn't want it that bad OR it's now much cheaper to buy.
I have challenged myself to put away 50% of my monthly income into stocks which is quite easy since I live frugal without debt. I work as an account executive, and make over $20000. $10000 goes into dividends, and the other $10000 covers my my food plus living expenses. I am seeing improvements in my portfolio, dividends look certain, but I have to attribute this to only to guidance of a licensed fund manager who allocates funds to a plethora of assets. I have to stay disciplined, and remember that I’m in it for the long term. Just got my first property and hopefully looking to get another down the road. Good luck to everyone and thanks for the great video.
@Joey PerolliniAs I said, it’s the help of an astute trade manager , Herman W Jonas, I’ve gotten into stocks and fx, splitting my funds in different assets that have brought me huge roi. I just reinvest and grow my portfolio at intervals. Here,
@@FreddyloneThanks for pointing this out. I usually skip past those since everyone can tell a spam. I also wrote him. How quickly does he respond? I will be patient though. Also, have you made any significant profit so far?
@@HaddllyI have made over $47k in profits, more so because I am reinvesting every two weeks. His strategies cuts across major financial markets which cuts across major markets which I found to generate more profit.
Ahh yea man when I have to make that choice I’m definitely going to pay it off. Investments aren’t 100% safe but paying off your house is 100% effective
I successfully paid off all my mortgages in just two years, thanks to the assistance of a Financial Adviser. At 54 and 48 years old, my husband and I have retired with a net worth surpassing $2 million, and we have no lingering debts. We've recognized that the crucial factor for achieving financial freedom is to make more informed and intelligent investment decisions.
Yes, she can. It’s possible .Numerous avenues exist for generating high yields during a crisis, but engaging in such trades is most advisable under the guidance of a financial advisor.
Honestly, paid off mine years ago yes I could have invested the money but had something happened like losing my job or as happened my work hours got cut then my mortgage would have been unpayable. A nest egg is nice but worrying over debt collectors knocking on the door because you haven't made the mortgage payments is simply by miles worse it leaves you up all night scared to open the mail, answer the phone and gives you sleepless nights.
Some people's comments here show how bitter they are about someone else paying off their mortgage early lol. I love the "hur dur property taxes" comments 😄 like you're not already paying property taxes while you have the mortgage, but all of sudden once the mortgage is gone paying property taxes all of a sudden becomes such a challenge 🤣
I agree and did this in a little more than 3 years. I worked in an industry where a career can evaporate in an instant. It allow me freedom at work knowing that if I lost a job I could still live in my home without having to go to damage control and sell the house. It allowed years later to pay cash for building a new home without financing. It freed me from playing the credit game and your FICO score. I just pushed more money towards principal payments each month to the point I could feel the pain. I kept a spreadsheet on how I was paying down the balance and how many square feet of the home I owned with each payment. YES its Worth the Effort to own a home debt free.
So I did the math on my house and compared it to the national average for rent and concluded that what I will spend in 25 years in mortgage payments, taxes and insurance would only have covered about 15.5 years of rent. Rent is going to get crazier and crazier in the next few years and that gap will likely only widen but only time will tell.
Hubby and I paid off our mortgage in 2014. We are both retired now. It was the absolute best decision we ever made. Because of that, we can live mainly off Social Security. We haven't had to touch our retirement accounts yet (other than a home repair, property taxes or a vacation) because we have no debt and our SS income goes much further. Great video.
Have to totally agree with you on better sleep. I’ve been sleeping great the past couple of months since paying off my mortgage. Knowing that I don’t have to make that mortgage payment every month feels absolutely great.
The “lower, cheaper home” and having a healthy investments into retirement are both key to making it an “acceptable choice”. I did the same and I find that doing so makes it easier to accept more risk in my retirement accounts. Where I need it.
One thing to note for those that have only been in the stock market for 12 years or less (or especially the last 1.5 years), those returns are not guaranteed to outperform your mortgage interest rate. Stonks don't always go up. For people with less than ultra steady jobs, you can do a lot worse than getting out of debt when times are good.
@@amabdall the main problem is that most people don’t do either..they accept the mortgage as a life sentence, and waste away any remaining money..on paper it makes sense, but it’s hard to put into action.
@@amabdall Not every year is gauranteed to have a positive return is what he's saying. Paying off your mortgage is a gauranteed return on investment. There is a risk factor to this equation
This is incredible. Being two years into the journey of getting to financial peace and independence it has already changed my family’s life. The disagreement other people have shown even when I have evidence of how it’s improved our situation was definitely unexpected, but every step closer to independence we get I can see some people start to pay attention a bit more. I can’t imagine not having the “North Star” of financial independence in my life!
USA folks hate seeing anyone get actual freedom. When you are free of financial enslavement others get very angry for not taking for the propaganda they worship.
I paid off my mortgage too. Then quit the job I hated. I make less money than last few years but I have a job I like and don't stress about my monthly expenses.
Paid off our mortgage early. I had a big career decision and it was easy to do, because I had no mortgage payment. That decision led to 20% increase in pay over 2-3 years. If we had that large mortgage payment, I am not sure I would have taken the job.
Paid mine off in March 2021 - Not one regret here and I will not regret it over the next 20+ years I would have had left if I just paid the minimum. Yes your house is an asset but its still a liability if you are making a payment on it and if you lost your job or had health issues its just another stressful debt you gotta find money to cover.
My dad paid his off early. I'll say, it was a great thing when he got dementia. Didn't have to worry about some monthly payment, getting those funds, etc. And now that he has passed, don't have to worry about that mortgage or anything like that when we sell the house.
Great video. I paid off my mortgage 6 months ago at precisely half the time of the original expected 25 years. I heard the same thing: Money is cheap. Should have invested the money where returns are higher than the mortgage rate. Do I regret it? Not a chance. Hell NO. If there's regret, I wish I'd started earlier as I only focus on paying down my mortgage 6 years into home ownership. And nowhere I compromised my standard of living along the way and I am not a frugal person. I just developed better wiser spending habits. Not too many things in life give me peace of mind EVERY single day and being debt free is chief among them.
I have made 2 principal payments a month for the last 8 years...I just made my January 2031 payment.....if I can keep it up, I will be done in 7 years, cutting my 30 year loan into 15 years, and saving $60k in interest.
Paying off my Mortgage was my greatest achievement..I own my own home and nobody can take it away from me..I will sell it when I retire and buy a place by the sea in North Wales.
The peace of mind having a roof over your head for the rest of your life is definitely worth it. You never know what curve balls life will throw at you, so knowing you will always have a home is priceless.
I was laid off before my scheduled retirement. One of the decisions I made was to buy a newer but smaller home cash and bank the residual of the 403b in an annuity account. I look at the monthly rent/payment avoided as a dividend, that is effectively tax free. Everyone pays property taxes either directly or in the rent/lease so I look at that as a wash. Both cars have been paid off for years, but I did buy a new one recently with the oldest earmarked for my son who is in basic training at the moment. Everything you said makes perfect sense to me and has worked out well for the past 10 years. By the way, market value on the house has appreciated 232% based on reported market values so I guess even my derived dividend increased right along with the market value.
Great explanation of your overall financial picture. In my opinion, you can’t put a price on the freedom of having no mortgage. Especially in current times where the government over reach is becoming more and more frequent.
Good for you man. I'm living in a house that is way too big for my family, even to the point where I wished I'd stay put in my smaller house that had less up keep. My mortgage payments are low, but I'd love to do what you've done and pay my mortgage off early. Congratulations on getting it out the way so young. Best of luck to you for the future.
I notice that most people that give the advice to not pay off the house have never payed off a house, and may the minimum on their mortgage. Being the paid for house gang... it is not worth the stress of a mortgage to keep it around.
The question is not what only makes mathematical sense, its about what makes you sleep better at night. Paying off mortgage most certainly makes you sleep better at night regardless of how much opportunity you might have missed out on. I have been mortgage free in the UK since age 23. Me and wife have the option to work on what ever we want, work for who ever we want. Or simply not have to work and trade time for money
I was in the no mortgage club. Was amazing. Truely freedom. Could raise a baby and live off one income. Now I have a bigger house and I kind of miss no mortgage and smaller house.
An ideal plan: Get married, work hard with double income to afford mortgage (aka leveraged borrowing) on big house. Have kids, sell big house, use capital gain to buy small house allowing stay-at-home parent(s). When kids at school, buy bigger house with mortgage (with 2x income) for more room. When kids leave, sell big home and live mortgage free in more modest home - smaller income required. Use money to help kids with buying home. (Seems obvious now - to someone who has failed to follow his own advice :) )
I agree, you take the extra money from investments and add that to your mortgage payments every month and you still get to pay off your mortgage early. Investment income repetively turned over grows astronomically.
Yes the mortgage is the cheapest debt you have and you should 100% pay off other debt first. But the two largest signifiers of later life financial freedom is no debt and owning your own home. You can’t realistically retire these days with a mortgage still hanging over your head.
Its not just comparing interest rates when comparing paying mortgage and investing. Rise in equity of the property must be factored in. If you bought in 2008 the value of the property may have increased 3x, which means you save the interest and every dollar put into the principal instantly becomes worth $3 more... and it is as close to liquid as you can get because property is selling in less than a week on average.
With what I’ve learned over two decades investing, given enough time, solid investments have the potential to double the initial principal amount, but many investors are instead attracted to the lure of high yields in short periods of time despite the possibility of unattractive losses before even getting out. So the onus is on newbies to beware.
@Ralph Zimmerman Stock investing, when done well, is among the most effective ways to build long term wealth. I work with a fiduciary Levi Clemans, a renowned fiduciary. His guidance has given me an edge in the market. Here, reach him
I'm subscribing right now and forever. Never found any person expressing himself as good as you do. Clear as flowing water. And I'm Spanish so Im pretty sure of that. Thanks a lot for your knowledge and sharing it with us.
Having NO payments is the best way to live.....Period!!!!! Paid mine off 5.5 years early back on March 10th 2021. Its the best feeling. Income doesnt matter when you have no outgo...
I'm following in your footsteps! I've been making extra mortgage payments for the past year and a half. But I agree, I still max out my retirement and do this in addition to, not instead of, my regular investments. I think it's best to do a little bit of everything.
JJ's opinion: Safety & Sleeping better at night is the top reason for JJ paying his home off early, especially since he works for himself and his income sources could drop at any moment which he then says would mean he would have to startup another business. My take: It is actually safer, more profitable, and more tax efficient to NOT pay it off. Setup a brokerage account called the "PAY OFF THE HOUSE FUND" and put every dime there. Now JJ could write off more interest each year to offset his income tax, grow those funds with a conservative investment strategy, AND if his income stops for any reason he could draw off the fund to pay his mortgage and more importantly fund the next business.
WHY would anyone say you shouldn't pay your mortgage off early?! That's insane! Rule 101 of Fiscal Responsibility is: PAY OFF YOUR DEBTS FIRST! I paid mine off 16 years early in February this year and I don't regret it for one second. I've saved thousands of pounds and I'll now always have somewhere to live.
Because divorce law doesn't favor men. All these guys paying off their mortgages super fast will be left with zero houses and zero investments after a divorce. Look at all these people in the comments ... 50% of them will get divorced and those guys are going to get wrecked.
"Pay off your *high interest* debts (e.g. Credit cards, car loans) first" Also, why pay off your mortgage at 2% when you can invest for a (conservative) 5% return?
Congratulations!! Having no mortgage is the best gift a homeowner can give themselves. Plus, should you decide to move, you have all that capital to put down. 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾. I love it!!
I agree with you 100%. I paid off my 30 year mortgage in less than 8 years. Do not regret it. Meanwhile my 401k has lost 12k since January 2022. I saved tons of $$ by doing so.
Good stuff as always. Personal finance, is well, personal! We need to make the decisions that make us feel good and can create a balanced approach to our lives.
At 59 1/2 I started strategically taking distributions from my modest retirement accounts to pay down/ pay off rental property. Now that it's paid off (at 61) I have no debt and more disposable income than ever before. I was chomping at the bit to start taking distributions because I thought the markets were high back then and due for a correction. Other than COVID I've been wrong, and I don't even care. The money that is still in my retirement accounts is at least for now continuing to grow while the assets that I have paid off at least for now continue to appreciate. And if the economy takes a big dive I could probably more comfortably charge lower rents than the guy with mortgages on his rentals.
I feel like only a person who's never had to worry about how they're going to pay their bills would have trouble understanding the appeal of paying off the biggest bill most people ever have.
Generally it isn’t about “paying the bills.” Most people stay at a job they hate because they have a mortgage and a $500 car payment, granted yes that’s poor financial management if it’s not budgeted but paying off your mortgage or even car allows you to quit that job you hate and not have high expectations of another job. I’m comfortable enough to quit my job, find a “starter” job until I find another job that needs my needs. Long story short paying off the mortgage allows freedom to do whatever you want
@@Lobo59470 i definitely understand that. Also I understand that everyone isn't strapped trying to figure out how to get by and certainly shouldn't be talking about investing if they're in that position. My point is that even though I don't have to worry about that today, I know what it's like and knowing i wouldn't have to ever think about it at all would be a load off my shoulders, and therefore I would have the freedom to do the things I would like to do with less worry. Just like any other debt, getting that out of the way means peace of mind and yes, freedom. For a person to not comprehend that is very close minded.
Not necessarily, it has to do with whether you can control your emotions and work the math instead of just feeling better now but wasting an opportunity to be better off 10 years down the road. And that's the difference between low income and middle class people and rich ones
I appreciate your feedback on this. I'm currently in the position doubting on which next step should I take to get closer to FI: invest in a second rental property or use the savings to start paying off my mortgage. What makes it a tough decision for me is because knowing how compound interest works, the sooner you invest, more it will compound. But right now I'm more towards paying off the mortgage, as you said as well as other comments, living without a mortgage gives you that "special" feeling. And also, I'm starting to believe that it's actually the closest path to reach FI. Cheers from Barcelona, Spain!
Paying off early is a no brainer. Huge peace of mind, avoid paying massive interest cost, investments go down as well as up (brokers make the big bucks on investing).
Great video and interesting points. I saw on the Money Guys recently an interesting point re paying off or not. That is age. They say if you're approaching 50 then start paying off the mortgage as part of de risking. I think even part paying it is fine as well as investing, the closer to 50 you are. Sleeping soundly is very important. I'm self employed too, love from the UK 🇬🇧
If you do the calculations the amount of money you put into lump sums and the amount of interest you save is HUGE. Lumposums in the beginning is important because youre paying all interest at first but lump sums go into principal.
I actually decided to not pay it off early as it is on a fixed rate. Invested and bought undervalued stocks and grow the dividend snowball. Interest on the mortgage is under 5%. Yield on stocks is more than 10%. In summary the mortgage payment is about $1800 on the home and currently the dividends are over $9000 per month and growing in compound growth. So I pay my mortgage and roll over the dividends. Eventually when I retire, I may either use dividends to pay the mortgage or sell stocks with lower returns to pay the mortgage. I have actually stopped investing regularly, except rolling dividends. For safety I do have a watch on the stocks for falling prices and have some on a stop loss sale order. For example, sold my tech stock for over double the current price. Sold one for $62.75, and it is 29.99 this weekend. Even sold a dividend aristocrat after it increased in value by 190% in a bubble. It is now down 12% from where it sold. Holding a stock that drops 11% to get a 3% dividend is crazy. I continue to work so I don't have to draw the dividends and can roll them over for compound growth. I can retire now, but would rather have enough growth to survive the high inflation the current money printing is causing.
Hey JJ congratulations. I also paid off my mortgage last year November and the best feeling EVER!!!! Still working 9-5 and saving to invest more in the meantime. Looking to team up with real estate investors to start making real money in real estate.
In my experience, those people that offer advice about investing and finance, and have all the answers about paying your mortgage, stocks, savings, retirement, etc. never have any money of their own. They are dead broke and live paycheck to paycheck, but somehow still have all the answers about finance. I prefer to listen to someone such as you. And me for that matter. I have no bills and a healthy retirement account. Not rich by any measure, but I could stop working today and live comfortably the rest of my life.
Listen, you don't own " YOUR " home until you pay that last payment ! Hello from England. I paid my mortgage off aged 43 . Today people borrow money for new cars and to look rich. Be sensible , think ahead
Totally agree, no market return can compare to the independence and peace of mind paying off mortgage can give you, living stress free can never be bad, but yes also agree that keep investing as well on the side :)
Peace of mind of not having that monthly mortgage payment is good for me..Stock Market can be up or down and you take a chance..Great information brother..Keep Crushing It!! Stay HUMBLE, Stay HUNGRY, Stay FOCUSED...~The Jarhead Entrepreneur
We paid off our mortgage early and yes it gives me peace of mind. One less large payment each month and you can take that money and put it somewhere else
you’ll regret it if you have a crisis like having to hire an attorney or divorce or some other crisis that requires cash more then what is in our emergency fund
Few things in life have the utility of a home! Its real, its yours, its not a number on a screen or piece of paper! The peace of mind is priceless. You have to consider your property value going up with time as well. Its a no brainer. Low overhead while owning a roof over your head is tough to beat!
Housing is the most expensive piece of anyone's budget. While tax and insurance doesn't go away, there is nothing more satisfying as having a mortgage paid off. Yes, invest, but be honest with yourself. This world is volatile, and economics can feel like a house of cards. You should not invest heavily if you cannot afford to lose on those investments, and there will be times when you will. Paying off your home, if you're able, safeguards against the worst case scenario of market crashes, deep recessions, and loss of income. I saw it happen to far too many people in the 2008 crash. Today, a year after JJ's video, we have banks folding now, hyper inflation, stock markets reacting, interest rates rising (though unlikely to continue to be pushed up by the Fed at this moment because of the bank issue), but lending is going to tighten up because of it and interest rates for borrowers will still increase. Inflation will react with increasing due to all of this too. If you can, pay off that loan and have the peace of mind that your living situation is secure even if the bottom falls out nearly everywhere else.
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Smart play and u always have a roof over your head with no worries.
I agree. They can get back into debt if they don’t like being debt free. This yr I put 75k towards my principle. Was at 242k dec 2020 and now oct 2021 down to 167k.
Gazelle intensity. Smiles.
JJ you have a striking resemblance to retired MLB player Russell Martin.
The positive reward is that you don't have to worry about losing your job in the future after paying off your mortgage. You will always be able to support yourself flipping burgers at McDonald's because you don't have to pay for shelter which is the largest living cost people have and the main reason why people work to begin with. Even if you invest and earn a higher yield, if you lose your job and cannot get a replacement at the same level of income soon enough there is a high likelyhood you may loose everything you have. The exception to this are high skilled blue collar professionals like truck drivers, mechanics and registered nurses etc. but most people are not in those types of industries. If you have to pay for housing costs jobs basically control and you could even say own your life. Removing the source of your need to have a job allows for personal freedom and moreso future financial freedom from the burden of having to make sure you can pay for a roof over your head
If my Bitcoin skyrockets, I can pay off my townhouse
If you regret it you can always get another one.
haha love this!
😂😂😂
Dave Ramsey listener right there
Where’s your channel Casey?
@@jjbuckner it's a Dave Ramsey quote. The person you replied to literally posts a comment on every single Dave Ramsey video.
Back in the day, when I purchased my first home to live-in; that was Miami in the early 1990s, first mortgages with rates of 8 to 9% and 9% to 10% were typical. People will have to accept the possibility that we won't ever return to 3%. If sellers must sell, home prices will have to decline, and lower evaluations will follow. Pretty sure I'm not alone in my chain of thoughts.
If anything, it'll get worse. Very soon, affordable housing will no longer be affordable. So anything anyone want to do, I will advise they do it now because the prices today will look like dips tomorrow. Until the Fed clamps down even further, I think we're going to see hysteria due to rampant inflation. You can't halfway rip the band-aid off.
consider moving your money from the housing market to financial markets or gold due to high mortgage rates and tough guidelines. Home prices may need to drop significantly before things stabilize. Seeking advice from a financial advisor who understands the market could be helpful in making the right decisions.
I will be happy getting assistance and glad to get the help of one, but just how can one spot a reputable one?
Carol Vivian Constable is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment..
Appreciate this recommendation, hopefully I can get some insight to where the market is headed and strategies to beat the downtrend with when I hear back from Carol.
I paid off my mortgage last November, 13 years early. Not a day goes by where I question that decision. That was the best choice ever. True homeownership is priceless. And yes, of course you still have to pay taxes and home owners insurance. That’s not a big deal when you’re considering the big picture. That’s like complaining that you still have to pay for gas or insurance when you buy a car. 🙄🙄
I paid mine off fifteen years early. I was laid off from my job four years ago and found another job that was not desirable. I quit it after a year. Never thought of retiring earlier than my full retirement age 67 ( I was 56 when I quit). Because my goal was not only to pay off my mortgage early I was an aggressive saver contributing to retirement accounts and my emergency fund. I have decided to retire now as I have my investments laddered. I would not have been able to retire had I not had a game plan to pay my mortgage earlier freeing me up from the most expensive liability.
Congrats and I do agree, yet if property taxes are not paid, the true owners will come for their property.
Congratulations to you.... I'm still toddler stage so that is a big goal I'm working towards.... But a least you have the biggest DEBT paid off unless you have a lot in student loans....
@Emartinez2499 No property taxes here. I’m a disabled vet.
@@thesuperioraffection4502 I’m a true home owner and disabled vet. No property taxes here.
My wife and I's monthly payment was $2415 month. We would pay an extra $500 a month towards the principal. We currently just refinanced to get a lower interest rate and to get off of PMI. Our new monthly payment is $2918 a month. We plan on still paying $3700 a month but are now going to do bi-monthly payments.
Try making the payments quarterly, in addition to adding, a payment each month and watch how fast the payments begin to drop on your amortization chart. I've got one more year after starting about a year ago. The timing of the payments is everything. This is the only thing that they all leave out when doing the videos.
Instead of extra payments, I suspect you would be better off putting the $782 per month into shares of Apple and Amazon. The video more or less describes how you can get out of being a debt slave When you have cash you have options. Smart people hold on to cash. They don't instantly shove it toward debt. Once it is used to pay on the debt, it is no longer accessible.
One part of this vid that I do like is the idea of not taking on a large debt in the first place. I think there should be a balance between the amount of debt you incur and the amount of cash you can invest. I would rather have a $1000 house payment and $1000 going into stocks than a $2000 house payment and no stocks. If you have cash and you’re confused I will suggest you contact a finance advisor
Sharon Ann Meny, just check her out. It's better to hire a skilled financial planner especially if you're not one yourself. I hired one after my retirement pension took a hit in 2021 April due to the crash.
Pay of your mortgage is a great peace of mind. Everyone talks about the math but forget the psychology
Agreed!
Agreed a thousand percent
Facts.... peace of mind is priceless.
Peace of mind for sure. Also, people don't think about when you no longer have a mortgage you're potentially gaining more time. If I don't have a mortgage, that means I don't have to work as much, and not working will allow you to spend more time on things you'd like to do instead of a 9-5 job. More time with friends, more time with family. Sometimes I feel people don't realize that time is the most important thing.
Managing your money based on emotions... yeah great idea.
I paid up all my mortgages in 2yrs while working with a Financial Adviser. I’m 50 and my husband 54 we are both retired with over $3 million in net worth and no debts. We got to realize that the secret to financial freedom is making better investments.
That is so amazing, I’m trying to get onto the investing ladder at 40. I wish at 55 I will be testifying to similar success..
I read a book that talked about having a financial adviser. Well, Credits to *ROCHELLE DUNGCA-SCHREIBER,* she saw me through the process. You can glance her name up on the internet and verify her yourself. she has years of financial market experience....
Indeed, The quickest way to make your first millions is to invest directly with an expert that is trustworthy and has made a name and individual billionaires.. I'm surprised you know her too
H Florence,
I'm super inspired but your comment.
Would you be willing to share some of your lessons learned?
"Teach a man to fish, feed him for a lifetime." 😀🙏
From my experience, the people against me paying off my mortgage early are people who are basically living paycheck to paycheck and don't have the money to even make extra payments, much less ask the bank for an "early payoff" amount. Why invest in an economy running on a dollar that has lost 94% of its purchasing power since the 70's? I'm 3 years from my goal and there is literally nothing that would stop me from paying off my mortgage 25 years early.
My last payment goes in at midnight tomorrow, 8 years early after 15 years of nothing but financial chaos (2007 recession hit me hard, and what followed after didn't help either), I'm already breathing easier.
@@michaelkeudel8770 Congrats! I have made 2 principal payments a month for the last 8 years...I just made my January 2031 payment.....if I can keep it up, I will be done in 7 years, cutting my 30 year loan into 15 years, and saving $60k in interest.
Dollar losing value=higher inflation helps you if have debt. It reduces the value of the loan.
I don’t understand if having the amount you would need to payoff the house in investments, what the difference would be compared to paying off your house. If you needed to pay the mortgage off you can do so quickly. In the long term, your investments will grow quicker than your mortgage rate.
@@mitsospiros List the investments that people should invest in? And I don't mean generic like stocks, real estate, etc. I mean tell me the name of that stock and how much dividends it's paid in the last 5 years. If it's real estate, tell me exactly where that property is located and who to contact to buy it.
People are telling you all that they have paid off their mortgage and folks on the sidelines telling them they should have invested. What if they had instead invested that money in ROKU stocks? They would be up sh*t creek right now
@@KnowledgeSeeker78491 mortgages are typically 15 or 30 years. Any index fund tracking the S&P 500 will certainly do better than any mortgage interest rate during that time period.
I love owning my home outright. My mortgage kept me locked into a career that I hated, but now I have hope for the future. Honestly, it never felt like my house as long as the bank held the deed.
Amen! Modern day slaves to the system
The government still owns your home, stop paying your property taxes and see what happens. We are renters of everything.
@MikkelRS that is awesome!
Well said.👏
I am more concerned about the government taking the house than the mortgage company. Government gets to act above the law more than even the darn bank!
I cleared my mortgage in ten years, saved for the next three and when the credit crunch happened I put down deposits on a few more properties. Fast forward 13 years I've been out of work for five months now, my properties have nearly doubled in that time and I'm saving more than I'm spending. Best thing I've ever done.
Just to add in that time I took every shift available to me and saved a lot, it took 25 years of hard work.
Kudos! What a great motivating accomplishment !!
@@flawedsparkle6618 thanks, it's not easy but it's not impossible
👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿
Absolutely well done... Younger generation can learn a thing or two about being debt free
My wife and I bought our house at the age of 23 in 2001 paid it off in 2013. Best thing I ever did. My son was born 3 months early at 1lb 4oz with LOTS of medical problems. Since we didn’t have that huge mortgage payment it let her stay home with him and take care of all his needs. Between our house, investments and property we are almost millionaires right now. Our home has more then doubled in value since we bought it
The dollar is worth half it did.
Got one paid off two years ago and now less than two years away from paying the second.
The best part is the flexibility and freedom I will gain from it. Life is a lot easier when you you have the ability to say “nah” when a job is crushing your soul.
Pack light, travel often, and never let the things you own, own you.
Absolute truth right there. We love it, the freedom is great.
COngrats, but you could have bought 3-4 smaller rental properties and used the rental income to have no housing costs on your primary, plus end up owning all the properties, plus you could borrow against them if needed. We are at record low iteretes rates
@@Jim.Jim.32 while true, that also means I carry the risk of having 3-4 properties whose mortgages I couldn’t have paid if the US government removed my ability to evict problem tenants.
That very thing just happened to landlords all around the country.
I value my freedom of movement more than max ROI. Different strokes for different folks.
@@Jim.Jim.32 can still do that now. And having credit is not As comfortable for some as others
Well said, Whiskey!
Yup, I agree with JJ!! The best feeling I have was paying off my mortgage. That leaves me $1600 a month for building a nest egg. If for whatever I reason lose my job, I still have a roof over my head and much less stress. If I want to skip putting that money into a nest egg for a month I don't have stress. If I want to use that $1600 for a trip, I take it. That extra $1600 feels like a nice fat raise with much less stress indeed.
I love your response and hope xrp was a good reason you could do that.. 🎉😂
I buy 7k of stock per month. If you are high income with no kids, going 100% stock market is the best.
Mortgage free gang 👀
The real Marko in da house
Psychological security and freedom , worth more than math equations
Sweet! Marko you are everywhere.
Apple 🍏 bottom Jeans 👖 😂
Marko; love your videos man. Love when one content 😌 producer watches another.
Interesting. When I retired and sold my house I was able to buy my current house for cash. Some friends told me I should take out a mortgage and invest that money. But I never seriously considered doing that, and I must say, I sleep very well at night knowing the house is paid for!
Don't you hate people giving you unsolicited advice about what to do with your money?
Good job
No better feeling than knowing bank can Fu(k off
You own that pice of heaven on earth 👍🏻
The peace of mine is worth it.
@@linuxsurfer2002 So is the Peace of MIND. 😁
The returns on having a paid off mortgage are more than anything you can make in the market.... If the economy crashes or lose your job. It's nice to tell the family we don't have to worry about foreclosure.
I see you are not a fan of basic math.
@@rayrayray Show us your "basic math" that includes risks that could destroy your income and/or investments. Ray.
@@rayrayray not sure why you're bragging about not being able to do basic math yourself. I'd rather not give my bank well over $50K+ in mortgage interest just because I wasn't born to rich parents who could offer to loan me $200K+ interest free. Not everyone has financially stable parents to leech off of.
@@kawaiiphase7829 someone doesn’t understand how to calculate interest and forecasted gains. I suggest maybe taking a basic investing class or highschool level Econ class. 🙂
@@rayrayray - What the basic math does not take into account is human nature. Very, very few people have the discipline to stick to the investing plan where it makes sense to keep the mortgage and invest the money that they would have used to pay it off early. Most people would perhaps start investing, but then decide that the extra money would be "better spent" on lease payments for a BMW. The same with people that get a tax refund. If they adjusted their withholding to get that money in their paycheck each week, that small amount would get spent on Starbucks and beer. You may know the math and have the discipline. But the average person retires with well under $100k saved. Going into retirement with a mortgage would be a disaster for them. It is best to pay it off.
I'm turning 60 this year. We own 6 income properties. Yes there was a lot of sacrifice to make that happen. You're on the right path. The freedom from stress, from debt and the Idea that you're not a slave to the banks, is just so soothing and calming. You become more peaceful in yourself when you can channel your energy to things that you choose, not things that debt dictates. I hope many folks are inspired by your story and they too break the bonds of debt.
Those investments are not guaranteed to pay you back. It's a risk. Pay off your mortgage so you're not paying interest
Exactly
truth, owning your house IS a guarntee. Own it then play around with "investments"
@@davysmith8569 I'd rather let my investments help pay my house off over paying it off from my paycheck. But I have a stable job so it's a little different than self employed people
oh great another amateur in the markets who doesn't know what they're doing lmao
With a 30 year horizon (the length of the standard mortgage) the market has always returned net positive.
It's amazing how few people are supportive of paying off a mortgage. We did it to get out of the cycle of owing other people money. Feels fantastic to no longer be held to someone else's demands every month. Making financial decisions on my own terms with my entire paycheck is priceless.
They don't want to give up their lifestyle. I'm making the assumption that most people have to cut back in order to afford the additional payment money.
Plus paying huge sum of money in Interests each month to make someone else rich
Because the opportunity costs are high. I'd rather invest the $500k elsewhere and pay a 3% mortgage when I'll be earning 7%+.
7% > 3%, not that hard.
yep. knowing whatever happens you will never loose your home. we paid ours off in 2017. since then we live like royalty. can buy almost anything we want when we want
@@hello-nq3ze except now you're paying 7%+ that's hard to beat the investement
Correct. Living in a paid for house for almost 20 years. We are living quite well on what many would call a “low” income. 😒😎
Totally agree with you, I have in the past had things go downhill for me and was running around looking for money to pay my mortgage. Now that I find myself in a position to pay off my mortgage early it was a no brainer. We don't know what will happen to us in the future, so in my opinion pay off your mortgage, you can always invest money you gain from no mortgage
My house is paid off, as well. And property taxes and overall running costs are low.
Excellent peace of mind, WAY more cash to do/buy things I want.
Peace**
I made the last payment on my house January 29, 2021 and you don't need to tell me why you don't regret it. That sure does free up a considerable amount of money. My investment advisor actually told me NOT to pay off my mortgage because at that point it isn't anything but a "dead" asset. I fired the guy. Great video!
Why would a investment advisor tell you not to pay off your mortgage? 🤔 Is it because he feels you won’t have the money to invest with him do to paying your mortgage off early. 🤔 Yea you did the right thing by firing that guy! 👏🏾💯💯💯
@@DJYFii He even said he would miss out on fees and commissions. He's really going to miss out now!
Fired the guy tho😂😂😂
That’s why I never hire so called “ advisors “ in my life, because,,,,,, they are a joke.
@@tz8662 They want money, so be it.
Mine is being paid off at the end of the month! 6 years into a 15 year note! It’s been a struggle but worth it 100%
My problem with people that say it’s smarter to invest and keep the mortgage is that they don’t..they just keep the mortgage around, invest minimally, and end up wasting away that money on things like cars/toys, and never really invest anyway..
I decided to pay off the mortgage first in a hurry, then I can set my investments where I want them afterwards, and any income on top of that is mine to do as I please. The peace of mind know that you own your house is more comforting to me than watching market numbers go up, or even worse, down, while still making a house payment..
I paid mine off at 32. It was one of the best decisions I ever made. I don't sweat work - and learning how to save that amount of money was a good lesson in life. People that say that they would rather invest - are usually not investing that amount - that money is usually wasted on toys.
You will always need a place to sleep so get it over with, pay it off and move on with life.
👍👍👍👍. They are always broke
I buy 7k of stock per month with my salary. I day trade with margin and made 25k last quarter, but there are taxes on those quarterly gains, so day trading is lame. I don't recommend it unless there are sure trades. Most people lose on day trading.
Owning a house only makes sense if you are not high income and/or have kids. The stock market will crush it if you can put enough in.
You can't out trade a bull run when you are holding hundreds of thousands in a company, plus long-term gains are lower. So, buying a good company with lots of money and holding is the best deal. Day trading is okay, but few are great.
My wife and I did the same for the sole reason of safety net for our family. Same with credit cards and loans. Thank God we did! My wife lost her job due to covid this year and doing the numbers there is no way we could cover our expenses and would likely be homeless. Pay off large debt, save and invest. Free yourselves from the banking system.
Ding ding ding. This is exactly why it's the smart move
🎯
I work for a loan servicing company, and this man is correct for the typical homeowner. At any time you could be facing foreclosure.
I paid of my mortgage as soon as i had the money to do so. This was the only debt i have ever had and am a person who is quite happy to wait until i have the money to buy something. No need to ever be in debt and if something goes wrong and i loose my job then i still have a home.
Exactly! A lot of times when you have to save to buy something that you "think" that you really want you find out when you then have the money you really didn't want it that bad OR it's now much cheaper to buy.
I have challenged myself to put away 50% of my monthly income into stocks which is quite easy since I live frugal without debt. I work as an account executive, and make over $20000. $10000 goes into dividends, and the other $10000 covers my my food plus living expenses. I am seeing improvements in my portfolio, dividends look certain, but I have to attribute this to only to guidance of a licensed fund manager who allocates funds to a plethora of assets. I have to stay disciplined, and remember that I’m in it for the long term. Just got my first property and hopefully looking to get another down the road. Good luck to everyone and thanks for the great video.
@Joey PerolliniAs I said, it’s the help of an astute trade manager , Herman W Jonas, I’ve gotten into stocks and fx, splitting my funds in different assets that have brought me huge roi. I just reinvest and grow my portfolio at intervals. Here,
Hermanw jonas (a g mal
comm
I don’t make that much, but I sure do make enough. However, it will not be a bad idea to hear from a professional. I hope he replies my mail.
@@FreddyloneThanks for pointing this out. I usually skip past those since everyone can tell a spam. I also wrote him. How quickly does he respond? I will be patient though. Also, have you made any significant profit so far?
@@HaddllyI have made over $47k in profits, more so because I am reinvesting every two weeks. His strategies cuts across major financial markets which cuts across major markets which I found to generate more profit.
Ahh yea man when I have to make that choice I’m definitely going to pay it off. Investments aren’t 100% safe but paying off your house is 100% effective
I successfully paid off all my mortgages in just two years, thanks to the assistance of a Financial Adviser. At 54 and 48 years old, my husband and I have retired with a net worth surpassing $2 million, and we have no lingering debts. We've recognized that the crucial factor for achieving financial freedom is to make more informed and intelligent investment decisions.
That's impressive ! I could really use the expertise of these advisors.
This thread is a total load of crap.
@Rodxmirixm You won’t.
Yes, she can. It’s possible .Numerous avenues exist for generating high yields during a crisis, but engaging in such trades is most advisable under the guidance of a financial advisor.
That's truly remarkable! I could certainly benefit from the valuable insights and supervision provided by these advisors.
Honestly, paid off mine years ago yes I could have invested the money but had something happened like losing my job or as happened my work hours got cut then my mortgage would have been unpayable. A nest egg is nice but worrying over debt collectors knocking on the door because you haven't made the mortgage payments is simply by miles worse it leaves you up all night scared to open the mail, answer the phone and gives you sleepless nights.
Some people's comments here show how bitter they are about someone else paying off their mortgage early lol. I love the "hur dur property taxes" comments 😄 like you're not already paying property taxes while you have the mortgage, but all of sudden once the mortgage is gone paying property taxes all of a sudden becomes such a challenge 🤣
👍👍👍👍💯
😂😂😂 dude you are so right
Wish I could heart this
Paying off my mortgage was the best thing I'd ever done. You don't realize what you can do with 2800 more a month in your pocket
I feel like some people are lucky if they make 2800 a month 😂
Is the $2800 only your mortgage amount or does that include taxes & ins?
@@lulupiink6698 good question
Wow that’s massive amount of mortgage. My mortgage is €281 per month. With utilities, insurance, TV, internet, community fee, a total €500 all-in.
Meanwhile I make net 2000 a month. Lol
I agree and did this in a little more than 3 years. I worked in an industry where a career can evaporate in an instant. It allow me freedom at work knowing that if I lost a job I could still live in my home without having to go to damage control and sell the house. It allowed years later to pay cash for building a new home without financing. It freed me from playing the credit game and your FICO score. I just pushed more money towards principal payments each month to the point I could feel the pain. I kept a spreadsheet on how I was paying down the balance and how many square feet of the home I owned with each payment. YES its Worth the Effort to own a home debt free.
Kudos! I love the square foot idea! Sweet!
I like these types of videos. I've been paying off my loans aggressively since I graduated College and It's been so worth it.
You got this!
Owning your house outright is a massive burden off your shoulders. We bought outright after saving for it 5y, and it was totally worth it.
Buying the house that made sense financially to begin with is the key to this video. Congrats JJ!
So I did the math on my house and compared it to the national average for rent and concluded that what I will spend in 25 years in mortgage payments, taxes and insurance would only have covered about 15.5 years of rent. Rent is going to get crazier and crazier in the next few years and that gap will likely only widen but only time will tell.
Hubby and I paid off our mortgage in 2014. We are both retired now. It was the absolute best decision we ever made. Because of that, we can live mainly off Social Security. We haven't had to touch our retirement accounts yet (other than a home repair, property taxes or a vacation) because we have no debt and our SS income goes much further. Great video.
Have to totally agree with you on better sleep. I’ve been sleeping great the past couple of months since paying off my mortgage. Knowing that I don’t have to make that mortgage payment every month feels absolutely great.
The “lower, cheaper home” and having a healthy investments into retirement are both key to making it an “acceptable choice”. I did the same and I find that doing so makes it easier to accept more risk in my retirement accounts. Where I need it.
One thing to note for those that have only been in the stock market for 12 years or less (or especially the last 1.5 years), those returns are not guaranteed to outperform your mortgage interest rate. Stonks don't always go up. For people with less than ultra steady jobs, you can do a lot worse than getting out of debt when times are good.
Over the life of your mortgage you will outperform your interest rate
Even if you just invest in index funds, Sp 500 avg return is 8%+ over the past 50 years. So How can that not outperform a 3% loan
@@amabdall the main problem is that most people don’t do either..they accept the mortgage as a life sentence, and waste away any remaining money..on paper it makes sense, but it’s hard to put into action.
@@amabdall Not every year is gauranteed to have a positive return is what he's saying. Paying off your mortgage is a gauranteed return on investment. There is a risk factor to this equation
@@KingJack86 Not guaranteed by an means
This is incredible. Being two years into the journey of getting to financial peace and independence it has already changed my family’s life. The disagreement other people have shown even when I have evidence of how it’s improved our situation was definitely unexpected, but every step closer to independence we get I can see some people start to pay attention a bit more. I can’t imagine not having the “North Star” of financial independence in my life!
USA folks hate seeing anyone get actual freedom. When you are free of financial enslavement others get very angry for not taking for the propaganda they worship.
I paid off my mortgage too. Then quit the job I hated. I make less money than last few years but I have a job I like and don't stress about my monthly expenses.
Paid off our mortgage early. I had a big career decision and it was easy to do, because I had no mortgage payment. That decision led to 20% increase in pay over 2-3 years. If we had that large mortgage payment, I am not sure I would have taken the job.
Paid mine off in March 2021 - Not one regret here and I will not regret it over the next 20+ years I would have had left if I just paid the minimum. Yes your house is an asset but its still a liability if you are making a payment on it and if you lost your job or had health issues its just another stressful debt you gotta find money to cover.
we dont have 20 yrs. we are in end times now. tribulation beating on the door.
My dad paid his off early. I'll say, it was a great thing when he got dementia. Didn't have to worry about some monthly payment, getting those funds, etc. And now that he has passed, don't have to worry about that mortgage or anything like that when we sell the house.
Most people saying not to pay off mortgage early, can’t. Congratulations man!
Great video.
I paid off my mortgage 6 months ago at precisely half the time of the original expected 25 years.
I heard the same thing: Money is cheap. Should have invested the money where returns are higher than the mortgage rate.
Do I regret it? Not a chance. Hell NO. If there's regret, I wish I'd started earlier as I only focus on paying down my mortgage 6 years into home ownership. And nowhere I compromised my standard of living along the way and I am not a frugal person. I just developed better wiser spending habits.
Not too many things in life give me peace of mind EVERY single day and being debt free is chief among them.
I have made 2 principal payments a month for the last 8 years...I just made my January 2031 payment.....if I can keep it up, I will be done in 7 years, cutting my 30 year loan into 15 years, and saving $60k in interest.
Love that you gave the short answer in the beginning. Will continue to watch for the full explanation.
The only people who say paying off your mortgage early is not a good idea are the people who can’t afford to do so.
if you dont have a rent or mortgage payment imagine how much you could dump into investments....thats why you pay off mortgage early.
Paying off my Mortgage was my greatest achievement..I own my own home and nobody can take it away from me..I will sell it when I retire and buy a place by the sea in North Wales.
you dont own your house if you cant afford the property tax on it
Nice job with killing the mortgage! I agree with all of your points and next year I’ll be joining you in that No-Mortgage Club!
Aye thanks Bob! That’s huge man! It is such a great feeling!
I’ve been in this club for 23 years. I live at home with mommy and daddy
@@dirtydan6098 that's dirty Dan 🤣
The peace of mind having a roof over your head for the rest of your life is definitely worth it. You never know what curve balls life will throw at you, so knowing you will always have a home is priceless.
Definitely seems the way to go. Too bad there is always such high property taxes. Always a bill?”!!
@@PS-zw4yc Yeah unfortunately we never truly own our homes. Depending on where you live property and school taxes can be pretty expensive too.
I was laid off before my scheduled retirement. One of the decisions I made was to buy a newer but smaller home cash and bank the residual of the 403b in an annuity account. I look at the monthly rent/payment avoided as a dividend, that is effectively tax free. Everyone pays property taxes either directly or in the rent/lease so I look at that as a wash. Both cars have been paid off for years, but I did buy a new one recently with the oldest earmarked for my son who is in basic training at the moment. Everything you said makes perfect sense to me and has worked out well for the past 10 years. By the way, market value on the house has appreciated 232% based on reported market values so I guess even my derived dividend increased right along with the market value.
P
💯🎯. People never think they will be laid off
Great explanation of your overall financial picture. In my opinion, you can’t put a price on the freedom of having no mortgage. Especially in current times where the government over reach is becoming more and more frequent.
Good for you man. I'm living in a house that is way too big for my family, even to the point where I wished I'd stay put in my smaller house that had less up keep. My mortgage payments are low, but I'd love to do what you've done and pay my mortgage off early. Congratulations on getting it out the way so young. Best of luck to you for the future.
Loved this video and I agree
Tommy; love your videos man. Love when one content 😌 producer watches another.
Love your short answer!! I’m almost in the same situation as you. I’ll be done in 8 months if all goes as planned
I notice that most people that give the advice to not pay off the house have never payed off a house, and may the minimum on their mortgage. Being the paid for house gang... it is not worth the stress of a mortgage to keep it around.
The question is not what only makes mathematical sense, its about what makes you sleep better at night. Paying off mortgage most certainly makes you sleep better at night regardless of how much opportunity you might have missed out on. I have been mortgage free in the UK since age 23. Me and wife have the option to work on what ever we want, work for who ever we want. Or simply not have to work and trade time for money
Losing out on money would keep me up not a mortgage at 2.125%
I was in the no mortgage club. Was amazing. Truely freedom. Could raise a baby and live off one income.
Now I have a bigger house and I kind of miss no mortgage and smaller house.
An ideal plan: Get married, work hard with double income to afford mortgage (aka leveraged borrowing) on big house. Have kids, sell big house, use capital gain to buy small house allowing stay-at-home parent(s). When kids at school, buy bigger house with mortgage (with 2x income) for more room. When kids leave, sell big home and live mortgage free in more modest home - smaller income required. Use money to help kids with buying home. (Seems obvious now - to someone who has failed to follow his own advice :) )
Thanks. This has just gave me the extra boost I needed to pull the trigger on reducing my mortgage term
I paid off my mortgage in 2019! Love being completely debt free!
I’d recommend NO ONE pay off their mortgage at current US interest rates. Makes zero sense to me.
I agree, you take the extra money from investments and add that to your mortgage payments every month and you still get to pay off your mortgage early. Investment income repetively turned over grows astronomically.
History shows the opposite.
How do you feel now mate?
@@fvlok at higher interest rates like now it makes more sense.
I paid my mortgage off 10 years ago.The peace of mind is priceless.
I like your way of thinking.... I completely agree with what you did...😉👍💰💰💰
Yes the mortgage is the cheapest debt you have and you should 100% pay off other debt first. But the two largest signifiers of later life financial freedom is no debt and owning your own home. You can’t realistically retire these days with a mortgage still hanging over your head.
I paid my home off at age of 30 I’m 69 now with millions and who cares! Live a dept free life and find happiness.
Its not just comparing interest rates when comparing paying mortgage and investing. Rise in equity of the property must be factored in. If you bought in 2008 the value of the property may have increased 3x, which means you save the interest and every dollar put into the principal instantly becomes worth $3 more... and it is as close to liquid as you can get because property is selling in less than a week on average.
Congratulations on paying off the mortgage! Working towards that goal 🤞🏽 to achieve it in five years or less!
Thanks Wynter! You got this!!
With what I’ve learned over two decades investing, given enough time, solid investments have the potential to double the initial principal amount, but many investors are instead attracted to the lure of high yields in short periods of time despite the possibility of unattractive losses before even getting out. So the onus is on newbies to beware.
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on his webpage you can look him up online, and connect with him.
diversify is key. Catch a aapl amzn or lly and will easy offset some poor choices
I'm subscribing right now and forever.
Never found any person expressing himself as good as you do. Clear as flowing water. And I'm Spanish so Im pretty sure of that. Thanks a lot for your knowledge and sharing it with us.
Having NO payments is the best way to live.....Period!!!!! Paid mine off 5.5 years early back on March 10th 2021. Its the best feeling. Income doesnt matter when you have no outgo...
I'm following in your footsteps! I've been making extra mortgage payments for the past year and a half. But I agree, I still max out my retirement and do this in addition to, not instead of, my regular investments. I think it's best to do a little bit of everything.
Make sure the extra payment is going directly to the Principal Payment.
👍👍👍
JJ's opinion: Safety & Sleeping better at night is the top reason for JJ paying his home off early, especially since he works for himself and his income sources could drop at any moment which he then says would mean he would have to startup another business.
My take: It is actually safer, more profitable, and more tax efficient to NOT pay it off. Setup a brokerage account called the "PAY OFF THE HOUSE FUND" and put every dime there. Now JJ could write off more interest each year to offset his income tax, grow those funds with a conservative investment strategy, AND if his income stops for any reason he could draw off the fund to pay his mortgage and more importantly fund the next business.
There’s nothing wrong with paying off your mortgage early.
WHY would anyone say you shouldn't pay your mortgage off early?! That's insane! Rule 101 of Fiscal Responsibility is: PAY OFF YOUR DEBTS FIRST!
I paid mine off 16 years early in February this year and I don't regret it for one second. I've saved thousands of pounds and I'll now always have somewhere to live.
Because divorce law doesn't favor men. All these guys paying off their mortgages super fast will be left with zero houses and zero investments after a divorce. Look at all these people in the comments ... 50% of them will get divorced and those guys are going to get wrecked.
"Pay off your *high interest* debts (e.g. Credit cards, car loans) first"
Also, why pay off your mortgage at 2% when you can invest for a (conservative) 5% return?
@@samuelm5140 You'll find out if you ever lose your job
@@dpeagles got laid off in 2020. Thankfully, severance + 6 month emergency fund covered me while I found a new job 👍🏾
@@dpeaglesThen you just pay your mortgage with the liquid assets you have in the market.
Congratulations!! Having no mortgage is the best gift a homeowner can give themselves. Plus, should you decide to move, you have all that capital to put down. 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾. I love it!!
I agree with you 100%. I paid off my 30 year mortgage in less than 8 years. Do not regret it. Meanwhile my 401k has lost 12k since January 2022. I saved tons of $$ by doing so.
Good stuff as always. Personal finance, is well, personal! We need to make the decisions that make us feel good and can create a balanced approach to our lives.
At 59 1/2 I started strategically taking distributions from my modest retirement accounts to pay down/ pay off rental property. Now that it's paid off (at 61) I have no debt and more disposable income than ever before. I was chomping at the bit to start taking distributions because I thought the markets were high back then and due for a correction. Other than COVID I've been wrong, and I don't even care. The money that is still in my retirement accounts is at least for now continuing to grow while the assets that I have paid off at least for now continue to appreciate. And if the economy takes a big dive I could probably more comfortably charge lower rents than the guy with mortgages on his rentals.
I feel like only a person who's never had to worry about how they're going to pay their bills would have trouble understanding the appeal of paying off the biggest bill most people ever have.
Generally it isn’t about “paying the bills.” Most people stay at a job they hate because they have a mortgage and a $500 car payment, granted yes that’s poor financial management if it’s not budgeted but paying off your mortgage or even car allows you to quit that job you hate and not have high expectations of another job.
I’m comfortable enough to quit my job, find a “starter” job until I find another job that needs my needs.
Long story short paying off the mortgage allows freedom to do whatever you want
@@Lobo59470 i definitely understand that. Also I understand that everyone isn't strapped trying to figure out how to get by and certainly shouldn't be talking about investing if they're in that position. My point is that even though I don't have to worry about that today, I know what it's like and knowing i wouldn't have to ever think about it at all would be a load off my shoulders, and therefore I would have the freedom to do the things I would like to do with less worry.
Just like any other debt, getting that out of the way means peace of mind and yes, freedom. For a person to not comprehend that is very close minded.
Not necessarily, it has to do with whether you can control your emotions and work the math instead of just feeling better now but wasting an opportunity to be better off 10 years down the road. And that's the difference between low income and middle class people and rich ones
I appreciate your feedback on this. I'm currently in the position doubting on which next step should I take to get closer to FI: invest in a second rental property or use the savings to start paying off my mortgage. What makes it a tough decision for me is because knowing how compound interest works, the sooner you invest, more it will compound.
But right now I'm more towards paying off the mortgage, as you said as well as other comments, living without a mortgage gives you that "special" feeling. And also, I'm starting to believe that it's actually the closest path to reach FI. Cheers from Barcelona, Spain!
Oh man! You did the right thing! Zero debt is always the best way to live! 👍👍👍🙏🏻🙏🏻
Paying off early is a no brainer. Huge peace of mind, avoid paying massive interest cost, investments go down as well as up (brokers make the big bucks on investing).
Great video and interesting points. I saw on the Money Guys recently an interesting point re paying off or not. That is age. They say if you're approaching 50 then start paying off the mortgage as part of de risking. I think even part paying it is fine as well as investing, the closer to 50 you are. Sleeping soundly is very important. I'm self employed too, love from the UK 🇬🇧
If you do the calculations the amount of money you put into lump sums and the amount of interest you save is HUGE. Lumposums in the beginning is important because youre paying all interest at first but lump sums go into principal.
Paying off the mortgage in 2017 is the best thing I've ever done. Mortgage paid box ticked more money left for investing. 🚀
I actually decided to not pay it off early as it is on a fixed rate. Invested and bought undervalued stocks and grow the dividend snowball. Interest on the mortgage is under 5%. Yield on stocks is more than 10%. In summary the mortgage payment is about $1800 on the home and currently the dividends are over $9000 per month and growing in compound growth.
So I pay my mortgage and roll over the dividends. Eventually when I retire, I may either use dividends to pay the mortgage or sell stocks with lower returns to pay the mortgage.
I have actually stopped investing regularly, except rolling dividends.
For safety I do have a watch on the stocks for falling prices and have some on a stop loss sale order. For example, sold my tech stock for over double the current price. Sold one for $62.75, and it is 29.99 this weekend. Even sold a dividend aristocrat after it increased in value by 190% in a bubble. It is now down 12% from where it sold. Holding a stock that drops 11% to get a 3% dividend is crazy.
I continue to work so I don't have to draw the dividends and can roll them over for compound growth. I can retire now, but would rather have enough growth to survive the high inflation the current money printing is causing.
Hey JJ congratulations. I also paid off my mortgage last year November and the best feeling EVER!!!! Still working 9-5 and saving to invest more in the meantime. Looking to team up with real estate investors to start making real money in real estate.
In my experience, those people that offer advice about investing and finance, and have all the answers about paying your mortgage, stocks, savings, retirement, etc. never have any money of their own. They are dead broke and live paycheck to paycheck, but somehow still have all the answers about finance. I prefer to listen to someone such as you. And me for that matter. I have no bills and a healthy retirement account. Not rich by any measure, but I could stop working today and live comfortably the rest of my life.
👍👍👍👍 Absolutely
Listen, you don't own " YOUR " home until you pay that last payment ! Hello from England. I paid my mortgage off aged 43 . Today people borrow money for new cars and to look rich. Be sensible , think ahead
Totally agree, no market return can compare to the independence and peace of mind paying off mortgage can give you, living stress free can never be bad, but yes also agree that keep investing as well on the side :)
Peace of mind of not having that monthly mortgage payment is good for me..Stock Market can be up or down and you take a chance..Great information brother..Keep Crushing It!! Stay HUMBLE, Stay HUNGRY, Stay FOCUSED...~The Jarhead Entrepreneur
We paid off our mortgage early and yes it gives me peace of mind. One less large payment each month and you can take that money and put it somewhere else
Great achievement JJ and a little extra money has nothing on the piece of mind you have created for you and your family
you’ll regret it if you have a crisis like having to hire an attorney or divorce or some other crisis that requires cash more then what is in our emergency fund
Few things in life have the utility of a home! Its real, its yours, its not a number on a screen or piece of paper! The peace of mind is priceless. You have to consider your property value going up with time as well. Its a no brainer. Low overhead while owning a roof over your head is tough to beat!
its not yours if you dont pay property taxes.
@@BrianK-zz4fk The only thing we truly own is one square foot of real estate! Act accordingly!
Housing is the most expensive piece of anyone's budget. While tax and insurance doesn't go away, there is nothing more satisfying as having a mortgage paid off. Yes, invest, but be honest with yourself. This world is volatile, and economics can feel like a house of cards. You should not invest heavily if you cannot afford to lose on those investments, and there will be times when you will. Paying off your home, if you're able, safeguards against the worst case scenario of market crashes, deep recessions, and loss of income. I saw it happen to far too many people in the 2008 crash. Today, a year after JJ's video, we have banks folding now, hyper inflation, stock markets reacting, interest rates rising (though unlikely to continue to be pushed up by the Fed at this moment because of the bank issue), but lending is going to tighten up because of it and interest rates for borrowers will still increase. Inflation will react with increasing due to all of this too. If you can, pay off that loan and have the peace of mind that your living situation is secure even if the bottom falls out nearly everywhere else.
Such an underrated comment