- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
When has paying off a house ever been a decision someone regretted?
Posted on 4/5/25 at 8:52 am
Posted on 4/5/25 at 8:52 am
I potentially will have an upcoming opportunity to pay off my house.
The pros that I can think of are:
- Owning my own house outright minus annual property taxes
- Peace of mind
- Sense of security knowing that I will also have a house to call my own if there are uncertain economic times ahead (nonpolitical)
- Frees up monthly cash
- No longer paying interest, although it's "only" at 2.5 % with about 12.5 years left out of a 15 year mortgage
The other side of the coin I can think of are:
- Opportunity cost. The market could potentially earn anywhere more that 2.5 % interest annually
- Tax deduction
Liquidity will not be an issue.
As of today, I'm leaning to the peace of mind of no longer having a mortgage, or at least paying 1/2 or 3/4 of the remaining mortgage. I'm interested in reading perspective of others.
The pros that I can think of are:
- Owning my own house outright minus annual property taxes
- Peace of mind
- Sense of security knowing that I will also have a house to call my own if there are uncertain economic times ahead (nonpolitical)
- Frees up monthly cash
- No longer paying interest, although it's "only" at 2.5 % with about 12.5 years left out of a 15 year mortgage
The other side of the coin I can think of are:
- Opportunity cost. The market could potentially earn anywhere more that 2.5 % interest annually
- Tax deduction
Liquidity will not be an issue.
As of today, I'm leaning to the peace of mind of no longer having a mortgage, or at least paying 1/2 or 3/4 of the remaining mortgage. I'm interested in reading perspective of others.
This post was edited on 4/5/25 at 8:53 am
Posted on 4/5/25 at 9:00 am to Will Cover
I think you would be crazy to not take advantage of a 2.5% mortgage but do you man
Posted on 4/5/25 at 9:02 am to Will Cover
quote:
Opportunity cost
This is huge, especially after the market drop we just had. I’d dump it all in an S&P 500 index and let it ride.
Posted on 4/5/25 at 9:04 am to Will Cover
Anyone who paid off a <4% mortgage in the past 15 years instead of investing that money likely added years to their retirement date depending on when they wrote that lump sum check.
In your case with a 2.5%, at the VERY least, you should take that cash you’d use to pay off the mortgage, put it in a high yield savings earning ~4%, and have your automatic monthly payment come from that account. Theoretically, your mortgage is paid off if you don’t touch that account AND you are earning a little extra AND able to still deduct interest. Probably the biggest benefit though is in the event of a major emergency, you have a big pile of cash sitting there to utilize and it not be tied up in a home.
In your case with a 2.5%, at the VERY least, you should take that cash you’d use to pay off the mortgage, put it in a high yield savings earning ~4%, and have your automatic monthly payment come from that account. Theoretically, your mortgage is paid off if you don’t touch that account AND you are earning a little extra AND able to still deduct interest. Probably the biggest benefit though is in the event of a major emergency, you have a big pile of cash sitting there to utilize and it not be tied up in a home.
Posted on 4/5/25 at 9:04 am to Will Cover
Not everything has to make financial sense. If it makes your quality of life better, it is worth considering.
Posted on 4/5/25 at 9:11 am to TigerTatorTots
quote:
In your case with a 2.5%, at the VERY least, you should take that cash you’d use to pay off the mortgage, put it in a high yield savings earning ~4%, and have your automatic monthly payment come from that account. Theoretically, your mortgage is paid off if you don’t touch that account AND you are earning a little extra AND able to still deduct interest.
You bring up a great point. I used ChatGPT and it came up with this for me:
Current Mortgage Details (with escrow):
Total monthly payment: $1,300.91
This includes principal + interest + taxes + insurance
From earlier, we calculated that principal + interest alone = ~$770.71
So your escrow (taxes + insurance) = $1,300.91 – $770.71 = $530.20/month
That $530.20 is a fixed cost whether you pay off your mortgage or not — so we’ll exclude it when comparing payoff vs. investing.
Option A: Keep Mortgage, Invest $97,000 at 4% APY
You keep paying the $770.71/month toward your mortgage
You invest $97,000 at 4% APY (compounded monthly) for 12.5 years
At the end of 12.5 years, your investment grows to:
? $159,429
You paid $770.71 × 150 months = $115,606 on the mortgage
Net benefit = $159,429 – $115,606 = $43,823
? You end up ahead by $43,823 vs. paying off the mortgage.
Option B: Pay Off Mortgage Today
You pay $97,000 lump sum now
No more $770.71 monthly mortgage payments
But still pay $530.20/month for taxes and insurance
Your $97,000 doesn’t grow — no investment gains
Net benefit = Avoided interest: ~$18,606, but no investment growth
If I gave the correct information to ChatGPT, seeing it on paper so to speak, Option A appears to be the wiser financial choice, which ultimately can provide me with peace of mind over the years.
Certainly gives me reason to pause and think about this even more.
Of course, these calculations depend on actually being able to find and maintain access to a high-yield savings account offering a 4% return. I haven’t explored options yet, and I’d likely need to monitor rates over time to ensure it remains a better deal than paying off the mortgage.
This post was edited on 4/5/25 at 9:13 am
Posted on 4/5/25 at 9:16 am to Will Cover
Also, with the 10-year crashing you may not get that 4% much longer. You will also pay taxes on that 4%.
Posted on 4/5/25 at 9:21 am to TDTOM
How would I figure out or estimate my tax liability on interest earned at 4%?
Posted on 4/5/25 at 9:21 am to Will Cover
quote:
Total monthly payment: $1,300.91
If this was my all in mortgage I would have financed that house for a 100 years

House payment would be about the same as buying chips every month.
This post was edited on 4/5/25 at 9:22 am
Posted on 4/5/25 at 9:24 am to Will Cover
I believe it is taxed at your ordinary income tax rate. I could be wrong, though.
Posted on 4/5/25 at 9:57 am to Will Cover
quote:This is the part I just never can understand. Yes, it "frees up" cash...at the cost of putting down a much more massive chunk of cash that you now don't have access too!
Frees up monthly cash
Paying off 2.5% money seems really counter-productive to me.
Why does converting your cash nest egg into a much less liquid asset give you "peace of mind"? Legit question.
Posted on 4/5/25 at 10:01 am to Will Cover
Here’s one
30 year mortgage at 2%
Monthly note $1,000
20 years in
The note is mostly equity at this point
You decide to pay it off to improve cash flow and invest.
Instead of investing though, the wife just starts spending $1,000 /month more on Amazon crap
30 year mortgage at 2%
Monthly note $1,000
20 years in
The note is mostly equity at this point
You decide to pay it off to improve cash flow and invest.
Instead of investing though, the wife just starts spending $1,000 /month more on Amazon crap
Posted on 4/5/25 at 10:37 am to Will Cover
I semi retired about 7 yrs ago and moved out of the city. Since I didn't have consistent income I paid for my house in cash. But, looking back i wish I had financed at least 50% at a 30 yr 3% mortgage. That's basically free money considering inflation and the tax dedication.
Posted on 4/5/25 at 10:43 am to bama1959
Do you get the deduction if you don’t itemize?
Posted on 4/5/25 at 10:57 am to Will Cover
I regret paying off a 5.5% mortgage and missing a decade of higher returns.
If you do choose to pay it early for peace of mind, there is no sense doing half measures. If you find yourself in a predicament, the full payment is still due even if you paid extra early towards principal. At current rates, cash in a HYSA immediately accesible would give me more peace of mind and better return.
If you do choose to pay it early for peace of mind, there is no sense doing half measures. If you find yourself in a predicament, the full payment is still due even if you paid extra early towards principal. At current rates, cash in a HYSA immediately accesible would give me more peace of mind and better return.
Posted on 4/5/25 at 11:22 am to TorchtheFlyingTiger
Individual choice..
I paid mine off in early 40s … my reasons…
Oil industry … had been laid off recently.. that left a mark… I wanted to be able to sleep at night… figured no matter what happened I could get a job at lowes and keep my family stable and happy .. in a good school district .. life etc..
Took the extra cash when paid off … it was then targeted for college tuition .. all my kids graduated from college with no loans .. undergrads.. grad school. Medical school
..
I sleep well.. still in same house.
Gave me peace of mind.. I am a simple guy.. that was worth the lost financial opportunity..
I paid mine off in early 40s … my reasons…
Oil industry … had been laid off recently.. that left a mark… I wanted to be able to sleep at night… figured no matter what happened I could get a job at lowes and keep my family stable and happy .. in a good school district .. life etc..
Took the extra cash when paid off … it was then targeted for college tuition .. all my kids graduated from college with no loans .. undergrads.. grad school. Medical school
..
I sleep well.. still in same house.
Gave me peace of mind.. I am a simple guy.. that was worth the lost financial opportunity..
This post was edited on 4/5/25 at 11:25 am
Posted on 4/5/25 at 11:32 am to TDTOM
quote:
Do you get the deduction if you don’t itemize?
Yes, up to a 750k mortgage.
Posted on 4/5/25 at 12:10 pm to Will Cover
If you are truly a diligent investor, investing vs paying off 2.5% debt is almost certainly the right call.
But
I will never discount this. You only live once. If having a $0 on the right side of your ledger makes you happy/gives you comfort then in some ways it’s the best money you can ever spend. Money exists, for little else, but as a path towards peace of mind. I paid a butt ton of student loans at 6.9% from 2010-2014 to retire them early. If I had put each additional payment into the market I’d almost certainly be up financially. But the peace of mind return on not having debt is invaluable. Truly.
Full disclosure - I have a 2.625% mortgage and never plan to make an early payment.
But
quote:
Peace of mind
I will never discount this. You only live once. If having a $0 on the right side of your ledger makes you happy/gives you comfort then in some ways it’s the best money you can ever spend. Money exists, for little else, but as a path towards peace of mind. I paid a butt ton of student loans at 6.9% from 2010-2014 to retire them early. If I had put each additional payment into the market I’d almost certainly be up financially. But the peace of mind return on not having debt is invaluable. Truly.
Full disclosure - I have a 2.625% mortgage and never plan to make an early payment.
Posted on 4/5/25 at 12:25 pm to Will Cover
I fight this battle with clients regularly and have never won.
Just pay it off once you’ve got to this point in the decision process.

Just pay it off once you’ve got to this point in the decision process.
Posted on 4/5/25 at 12:28 pm to FieldEngineer
Not everybody likes money or wants to have more of it.
You can’t put a price tag on the peace of mind that comes with not having one bill automatically deducted from your bank account once a month.
You can’t put a price tag on the peace of mind that comes with not having one bill automatically deducted from your bank account once a month.
Popular
Back to top
