Originally Posted By: 99Saturn
I don't look to maximize my tax deduction, but I will gladly take the tax deduction off an interest rate somewhere between 3% and 4% on a 30 year and carry that loan while I leave my cash invested.
Let's just hope, which is not a strategy, that you will earn more than 3-4% annually in the next 30 years. If I pay it off early, then not only do I get to keep 100% of my money that I didn't pay in the form of interest (instead of 25%), any early payments that save me interest at that 3-4% interest rate is essentially a reverse savings account. The benefit then is that I am earning a guaranteed return instead of taking risk in the stock market (or other investment vehicles). I am not against risk, as I have money in mutual funds, etc., but getting rid of a house payment is great for pyschological reasons that can't be measured.
I don't look to maximize my tax deduction, but I will gladly take the tax deduction off an interest rate somewhere between 3% and 4% on a 30 year and carry that loan while I leave my cash invested.
Let's just hope, which is not a strategy, that you will earn more than 3-4% annually in the next 30 years. If I pay it off early, then not only do I get to keep 100% of my money that I didn't pay in the form of interest (instead of 25%), any early payments that save me interest at that 3-4% interest rate is essentially a reverse savings account. The benefit then is that I am earning a guaranteed return instead of taking risk in the stock market (or other investment vehicles). I am not against risk, as I have money in mutual funds, etc., but getting rid of a house payment is great for pyschological reasons that can't be measured.