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| Personal Finance Credit cards, home loans, retirement plans and taxes. The place for all your personal finance questions. |
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When you pay down debt early, you are effectively investing in debt and the the return is the interest rate on the loan. So, paying your car off earlier will give you a 4% return or saving you 4% which you could then save towards student loans. It's great that you are thinking about how to pay off your student loans when the time comes, especially considering the amount you are taking out. I'm wondering if you have run calculations on your current debt. Have you used online calculators to determine how quickly you could pay off the debt you have and how much it would save you? This SA calculator might help. Check the box at the bottom of the calculator so you can see how much interest it saves you each month. Play with the monthly amount to see how quickly you could pay the debt off. Add the bike payment to the car payment after its paid off to pay off the car faster. The calculator can help you see how fast you can pay it off. After those are paid off, you will have over $800 month to put towards your student loans. |
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I would pay off the bike today, not wait 8 months.
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-JPG `It is more blessed to give than to receive.' Acts 20:35b |
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In my OPINION, I would not take out a loan on a car. Ever. Period. I saved money by biking two miles each way from off-campus to my college campus. I staying in shape, built my credit score through the appropriate use of credit (e.g., only in emergency, although I did have student loans), and also avoided further debt. Student loan debt is bad enough, as it is! I am still paying off mine, and I was in college for just over 5 years. Unless you are virtually guaranteed a high-paying job, say as an engineer, when you get out of school, in my opinion, it is best to avoid debt at all costs.
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Since OP already has the loan, what would you suggest he do now?
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-JPG `It is more blessed to give than to receive.' Acts 20:35b |
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Thank you, everyone, for their thoughts and advice. I really appreciate you all taking the time to considerably respond. I am going to take a few days and go over all the numbers, and suggestions. I will update soon.
Thanks again, -Seekingknowledge- |
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If you owe 2.7K on the bike and your monthly payment is $110, how will it be paid off by the end of the year? Are you planning to pay extra on it, or did I miss something?
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I think the OP is in good shape considering his age and having no family obligations.
Granted, selling off his car and bike would certainly free up cash flow, but I don't see that he's in a desperate situation. $12k is not much of a car. If he plans to keep it till it dies, then he should proceed that way. The bike is not that much money either - and that is something that you really can keep for many, many years and enjoy. I'd recommend, as others have, of saving for your student loans payoff. When they are due, you may consider paying them or not, depending on your tax situation. IF they are deductible, there may be better uses for your money. Keep plugging away at your EF, and avoid any risky investments. Many people come on these forums in dire straits, unable to pay their bills and looking at homelessness. In those cases, desperate actions are needed. I don't see that here. Thankfully you have no CC debt. You bike loan is high, but the term and amount is short. I don't see much money in your budget for the ladies/bars/etc. I suspect you spend some money on such things, considering your age. To me, the biggest financial risk for a guy your age is starting a family before you are ready - it's very hard to recover from that. Good luck. |
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