At what point does one start throwing extra money at "good debt"?
I have a student loan balance of ~$16,000 at 3% and am making monthly payments of $310. No other debt.
I have a 5 month EF. I'm contributing 18% of my gross to retirement. I have a $100/mo car replacement fund. I have a $60/mo vacation fund.
After the above, minus my monthly expenses, I'm left with an extra $50-75 a month.
Since near-term returns are so low at present (savings accounts, money markets, etc), is now the time to pay extra off student loan principal each month, lopping off an extra $600+ a year?
Or do many of you think that anything extra like this should go to retirement for the long-term return?
I imagine it's a mix of balancing the simple truth of the math with the psychological benefit of reducing debt faster.
I'm curious to hear your points of view.
I have a student loan balance of ~$16,000 at 3% and am making monthly payments of $310. No other debt.
I have a 5 month EF. I'm contributing 18% of my gross to retirement. I have a $100/mo car replacement fund. I have a $60/mo vacation fund.
After the above, minus my monthly expenses, I'm left with an extra $50-75 a month.
Since near-term returns are so low at present (savings accounts, money markets, etc), is now the time to pay extra off student loan principal each month, lopping off an extra $600+ a year?
Or do many of you think that anything extra like this should go to retirement for the long-term return?
I imagine it's a mix of balancing the simple truth of the math with the psychological benefit of reducing debt faster.
I'm curious to hear your points of view.
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