Hello all,
We have been following Ramsey's Baby Steps for a while. All debt besides mortages have been paid. We built up an emergency fund of 5 months of expenses. I am putting 9% income in 401K and 6% into Roth 401K. I have three young kids, so I started 529s for them just last week.
I read somewhere on Ramsey's forums that if you have a second mortgage that is 50% or more of your annual income, then it should be treated in BS6 rather than at BS2.
When I started the program, the second mortage balance was at $40,000 and my household income was just under $80K per year.
Currently, the balance is now ~ $38,000 and my household income has increased slightly to $87K per year.
This second mortgage is a fixed interest rate of 8.125%. This mortgage was the result of an 80/15/5% split.
At this point, should I revert back to BS2 to pay off the second mortgage? This would involve taking a portion of cash from savings, stop investments and pull additional cash per month to pay it down.
I undertand there various schools of thought on this, just looking for sensible ideas and advice from personal savings enthusisasts!
Thanks
Jason
We have been following Ramsey's Baby Steps for a while. All debt besides mortages have been paid. We built up an emergency fund of 5 months of expenses. I am putting 9% income in 401K and 6% into Roth 401K. I have three young kids, so I started 529s for them just last week.
I read somewhere on Ramsey's forums that if you have a second mortgage that is 50% or more of your annual income, then it should be treated in BS6 rather than at BS2.
When I started the program, the second mortage balance was at $40,000 and my household income was just under $80K per year.
Currently, the balance is now ~ $38,000 and my household income has increased slightly to $87K per year.
This second mortgage is a fixed interest rate of 8.125%. This mortgage was the result of an 80/15/5% split.
At this point, should I revert back to BS2 to pay off the second mortgage? This would involve taking a portion of cash from savings, stop investments and pull additional cash per month to pay it down.
I undertand there various schools of thought on this, just looking for sensible ideas and advice from personal savings enthusisasts!
Thanks
Jason
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