Re: Tax Refund Time!
OK this changes the solution somewhat.
Pay off the 7k now. You have an income tax return. 100% of this goes to old debt... car is not the problem.
24k car is probably a higher interest rate than 36k student loans. Guessing based on experience... Whichever has the higher rate, I'd pay that off. factoring in the student loans are tax deductable (to a point), I would work on the car. 6% is a reasonable return... more than most savings accounts and less risk than stocks.
You cannot afford to be getting a 6k tax return with 24k of car debt. You are giving the government free money, and it's costing you whatever interest rate you are paying on the car (6%?). Adjust withholdings to give you an extra $200/month for car. Depending on how long the loan is for, this should pay off car 1-2 years sooner. This will be a 6% immediate return on your decision (or whatever interest rate you are paying on the car).
There is $300/month extra from withholdings. If you want to spend some of this, I could see merit to that. I would then set up an automatic deduction to an IRA (Roth is the suggestion). $200/month to Roth and $100/month to spend sounds reasonable. If you are worried about spending the money, use the 7k tax return to open a new bank account. Adjust your withholding allowances to get the $500/month into your paycheck into this account. Might want to add in amount of car payment too. Then send $500 from each paycheck to this new bank account. DO NOT get debit or ATM card for this account. Once account has $7500 in it (tax refund+one months pay) pay off the credit card. Then next month, set up so the car payment+$200 is deducted from account automatically. And the Roth IRA is set up to come out of this account automatically.
This assumes the rental is cash flow positive. If the rental unit is NOT cash flow positive, dump it, or invest $300/month into it to make it cash flow positive. Assuming you know enough about taxes, are you depreciating the rental for a tax deduction? A you deducting the interest and taxes for the rental? If you are not, seek a tax professional or dump the rental.
I don't see the student loan debt as a major issue... but getting cash flow positive on the rental to me is priority 2 after paying off old CC debt (priority 1).
Originally posted by timetosave
Pay off the 7k now. You have an income tax return. 100% of this goes to old debt... car is not the problem.
24k car is probably a higher interest rate than 36k student loans. Guessing based on experience... Whichever has the higher rate, I'd pay that off. factoring in the student loans are tax deductable (to a point), I would work on the car. 6% is a reasonable return... more than most savings accounts and less risk than stocks.
You cannot afford to be getting a 6k tax return with 24k of car debt. You are giving the government free money, and it's costing you whatever interest rate you are paying on the car (6%?). Adjust withholdings to give you an extra $200/month for car. Depending on how long the loan is for, this should pay off car 1-2 years sooner. This will be a 6% immediate return on your decision (or whatever interest rate you are paying on the car).
There is $300/month extra from withholdings. If you want to spend some of this, I could see merit to that. I would then set up an automatic deduction to an IRA (Roth is the suggestion). $200/month to Roth and $100/month to spend sounds reasonable. If you are worried about spending the money, use the 7k tax return to open a new bank account. Adjust your withholding allowances to get the $500/month into your paycheck into this account. Might want to add in amount of car payment too. Then send $500 from each paycheck to this new bank account. DO NOT get debit or ATM card for this account. Once account has $7500 in it (tax refund+one months pay) pay off the credit card. Then next month, set up so the car payment+$200 is deducted from account automatically. And the Roth IRA is set up to come out of this account automatically.
This assumes the rental is cash flow positive. If the rental unit is NOT cash flow positive, dump it, or invest $300/month into it to make it cash flow positive. Assuming you know enough about taxes, are you depreciating the rental for a tax deduction? A you deducting the interest and taxes for the rental? If you are not, seek a tax professional or dump the rental.
I don't see the student loan debt as a major issue... but getting cash flow positive on the rental to me is priority 2 after paying off old CC debt (priority 1).
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