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I'm trying to decide whether or not it will be worth it to pay extra on my student loans (interest) to take advantage of the tax credit for SL interest. My parents agreed before I graudated college that they would pay my student loans but I do not wish to spend the next 10 years relying on someone else to pay debt I am liable for so I am matching their monthly payment.
Income: $3400/mo after tax, $532/mo from parents for SL pmt Expenses: $3290/mo ($1064 on SL)(I include $100/150 in savings/401k in my expenses) EF: $11,050 (and no I'm not going to use it to pay down debt so don't suggest this one) SL balance: $46,200 No other debt No significant other/no children/1 dog/25 years old Mainly, I am looking for advice on if I should fork over another $1436 to get to the $2500 interest deduction (saving me ~$400 in interest over a projected 5 years) before the tax year ('11) ends. Last edited by auron : 12-16-2011 at 09:15 AM. |
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I am on the 10 year repayment plan @ 6.8% which ends up being $532/mo. The payment is high mainly because I am essentially making an extra payment each month. Parents contribute $532 and I contribute $532.
No, I have not considered refinancing mostly because I would rather be debt free. I know I could probably make a better return investing in something, but I don't have a working knowledge of what that something is yet. |
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Do you have any other savings or debt? Would you like to buy a house? Do you have money saved for that? Do you have money saved for a replacement car? Are you currently saving for retirement? Would the extra money that you put toward your loans be better served fulfilling one of the above questions? Maybe you already have all of your finances in order and the extra money that you put toward your SL's is truly extra money left over after all other financial obligations have been met. If so, then that's great. But, if your savings are lacking or your retirement is underfunded, then maybe directing the extra money that you put toward your loans elsewhere would make more financial sense.
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MODERATOR Brian |
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Yes, this is exactly what I am suggesting.
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at 6.8% and being in the tax bracket you are, I would put every extra penny towards student debt.
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http://themoney101.blogspot.com/ |
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And why would you trade in your low interest, tax-deductible student loan debt, for a high interest non-deductible title loan?? Why car title loans are a bad idea - CNN Your other options were good (pay more or get someone else to pay more for you). This one however, is terrible. Maybe it has something to do with the link in your post. Do you work for that title loan company or something??
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-JPG `It is more blessed to give than to receive.' Acts 20:35b Last edited by jpg7n16 : 01-16-2012 at 01:46 PM. |
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Did you even read my original post Travis? The thread was a question regarding the cost/benefit between paying extra to maximize SL interest tax deduction while keeping short term cash flow in mind...
p.s. There is no "easy" way to get out of debt.... EDIT: disregard my response, I now see Travis is just advertising this car title loan service on SL posts Last edited by auron : 01-16-2012 at 03:28 PM. |
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What is your AGI for 2011 taxes and do you expect it to be the same for 2012? If your income is approaching the cutoff for deducting interest you need to be careful (I believe it is $60K limit for a single).
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Hmm I did not consider this, but I only worked 6 months this year (was in school till end of spring term). I wasn't aware there is an income cutoff for SL interest deduction, or at least not that low. I'll have to keep this in mind for 2012...
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