Creative Real Estate Financing
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies

Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal


Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback
Updated 12 months ago on . Most recent reply

Loans from Deferred Compensation Plan (Retirement)
Good Morning,
I have heard of people using their deferred comp. retirement accounts as temporary loans to fund rehabs, buy properties, etc. The terms are listed below:
-9.5% Annual Interest; but you pay yourself the interest.
-1-5 year terms
-Up to 50% of your account balance can be loaned (50k max)
One of the issues I see is that the account is funded with pre-tax dollars. So I would be paying it back with after tax dollars to only pay tax on them again when I retire. Also, the account grows at half of the rate while the money is out. If I can get a 15-20% ROI (appreciation, depreciation, cash flow, mortgage paydown, write offs), and 9.5% on the funds I take out, would that be worth getting double taxed? I have averaged an 8.3% return over the last 6 years.
I am wondering if anyone has personally taken advantage of this.
I have a W2 with 19 years until retirement. I do REI on the side.
Most Popular Reply
