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Updated over 6 years ago on . Most recent reply

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Robert Reynolds
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Should I pay off my primary residence early?

Robert Reynolds
Posted

Hello,

I will soon be moving to Texas for work. I plan on buying my first home out there, but I am also planning on beginning to invest in buy and hold properties soon after I move. My wife and I will both be getting promotions and have a much lower cost of living, so we will be using this extra money to invest in real estate. I should be out there for about 5 years while saving to move to San Diego, CA. I know about the benefits of house hacking, but that option is not viable for my family. My main question is whether I should pay down the mortgage to have equity to use on the San Diego house while still investing in real estate, or make the normal payments and invest more aggressively in real estate?

Here are some numbers to give a bigger picture:

Current rent: $2,020

Mortgage payment estimate:

about $1,500 for a 15 year loan

about $1,100 for a 30 year loan

Should I get the 15 year loan and make extra principle payments to build equity to put towards the San Diego house, while slowly building my buy and hold investment portfolio?

Or, should I go for the 30 year loan and use the extra money to aggressively build my investment portfolio?

Thank you,

Robert

Most Popular Reply

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1,193
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Jim Cummings
  • Residential Real Estate Broker
  • College Station, TX
968
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Jim Cummings
  • Residential Real Estate Broker
  • College Station, TX
Replied

@Robert Reynolds. As @Derek Diamond says either is a viable strategy. 

I would recommend going with the 30-Year Product. This gives you a Lower (Required) Monthly Payment. You then have the option of accelerating the payoff period by using a Bi-Monthly Payment Option or just sending additional Money each month or whenever you budget allows without the heavier (Mandatory) monthly payment required by a 15-year product. 

If you are not familiar with the Bi-Monthly Payment program, the Lender collects half of your monthly payment every two weeks, So you end up making 13 payments each year instead of 12. 

And, if you really want to accelerate the payoff - go with a 30-Year Product, setup payments on a Bi-Monthly Basis, and then throw additional Money in each month.  

Either way - your rocking!

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