We've been working on building up an emergency fund, but I'm turning my attention to some outstanding debt at this point. Our emergency fund is about $6,000 and it's in an Emigrant Direct account earning 5.05%.
The debt we want to pay off is:
Student loan: $12,450 at 8.25% interest, payments are $170/month
Car loan: $2,900 at 4.75% interest, payments are $225/month
DH Visa: $675 at 10% interest, payments are $25/month
We can spare around $1000 a month to put towards savings and/or debt reduction. A "minimum" emergency fund of say 3 months' expenses would be roughly $10K, so we're not quite there, but I'm starting to feel like that is less of a priority until the debt is taken care of. I mean if we don't have those debt payments that reduces our living expenses by almost $500/month meaning we NEED less in an emergency.
It seems obvious to me that the Visa should just be paid in full. I'm getting some resistance from DH but he's weird like that. He has agreed to pay $100/month until it's paid. He hasn't actually used the card in a couple years, he's just been making those minimum payments all along. Go figure.
Less obvious to me is whether to prioritize paying off the car or the student loan. Clearly the student loan is at higher interest, but I could write a check *today* out of savings and just be done with the car payment, which is very attractive, and would also free up that much more cash on a monthly basis to put towards the student loan. We could also in theory then drop collision coverage, but the car is still worth about $3500 and our collision doesn't cost that much so I don't know if that's the best choice just yet. From a pure interest perspective however, it seems to make the most sense to let our savings continue to earn interest and just make the car payments as they come due. In that case the car would be paid off a year from now.
Somehow it's harder psychologically to take that same chunk of money and put it towards the student loan instead, although I think perhaps the math works better for us that way? Let's see, $2900 toward the principal today, then $900/month for the next 11 months means it would be completely paid off right around when we're done paying off the car. But our savings would be mighty thin during that time.
Looking for some other perspectives on this scenario...
The debt we want to pay off is:
Student loan: $12,450 at 8.25% interest, payments are $170/month
Car loan: $2,900 at 4.75% interest, payments are $225/month
DH Visa: $675 at 10% interest, payments are $25/month
We can spare around $1000 a month to put towards savings and/or debt reduction. A "minimum" emergency fund of say 3 months' expenses would be roughly $10K, so we're not quite there, but I'm starting to feel like that is less of a priority until the debt is taken care of. I mean if we don't have those debt payments that reduces our living expenses by almost $500/month meaning we NEED less in an emergency.
It seems obvious to me that the Visa should just be paid in full. I'm getting some resistance from DH but he's weird like that. He has agreed to pay $100/month until it's paid. He hasn't actually used the card in a couple years, he's just been making those minimum payments all along. Go figure.
Less obvious to me is whether to prioritize paying off the car or the student loan. Clearly the student loan is at higher interest, but I could write a check *today* out of savings and just be done with the car payment, which is very attractive, and would also free up that much more cash on a monthly basis to put towards the student loan. We could also in theory then drop collision coverage, but the car is still worth about $3500 and our collision doesn't cost that much so I don't know if that's the best choice just yet. From a pure interest perspective however, it seems to make the most sense to let our savings continue to earn interest and just make the car payments as they come due. In that case the car would be paid off a year from now.
Somehow it's harder psychologically to take that same chunk of money and put it towards the student loan instead, although I think perhaps the math works better for us that way? Let's see, $2900 toward the principal today, then $900/month for the next 11 months means it would be completely paid off right around when we're done paying off the car. But our savings would be mighty thin during that time.
Looking for some other perspectives on this scenario...

DH needs to learn about the power of compounding interest.
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