Should You Pay Off Your Mortgage Before You Retire?

June 19, 2008 RSS Feed Print

Financial planner Nancy Langdon Jones of Claremont, Calif., likes the idea of having her home paid off before she retires. Her husband, actor Claude Earl Jones, would rather have the money invested than tied up in the house. "For my husband, it was very important that he could look at his brokerage statement and see that the money was there," she says. "I wanted to know that if something came up we wouldn't have to worry about the house payments."

After sitting down with a financial planner to get a neutral, third-party view, the Joneses found their compromise: downsizing to a smaller house (with a more manageable mortgage payment) while keeping most of their savings in their brokerage account.

Their struggle illustrates a divide in the financial planning industry. Should you own your home free and clear before you retire? Or is it better to keep your mortgage and invest the money elsewhere at perhaps a higher return while reaping the mortgage-interest tax break? Here are factors to weigh when deciding which path is right for you.

Compare interest rates. The typical 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage interest rate is currently 6.57 percent, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. If you are getting a higher average rate of return on your investments elsewhere than your interest rate, it makes sense to keep your mortgage. Just over half of affluent baby boomers born in 1948 who have both mortgages and investable assets of at least $1 million do not plan to pay off their mortgages until their 70s, if ever, according to a recent survey of 500 people by investment management firm Bell Investment Advisors.

"Mortgages help free up funds that otherwise would be tied up in property ownership for investment in equities," says Jim Bell, the firm's founder and president. Investing in the stock market money that would otherwise be tied up in home equity also gives you the option of raising cash to deal with unexpected expenses like medical bills or even rising gas prices.

Pay it down. If you're not sure whether you can achieve a higher return in the stock market or aren't willing to take the risk, then you should prepay your mortgage principal as you approach retirement. "We don't know what the earnings are going to be in the market," says Vern Hayden, a certified financial planner and president of Hayden Financial Group in Westport, Conn. "The guaranteed return on your money is the interest you were paying" on the mortgage.

Refinancing from a variable-rate loan to a fixed-rate mortgage can give you a better idea of what your payments will be in retirement. Brent Neiser, a certified financial planner and a director of the National Endowment for Financial Education, recommends paying down principal above your monthly payments when you can. "Adding money at your discretion gives you the ability to stop that when times are tighter," he says. On a $150,000, 30-year mortgage at 6 percent interest, paying just $100 extra per month would save you $45,000 and allow you to pay off the debt seven years sooner than following the normal payment schedule.

Don't rob your retirement plan. According to the most recent Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances, 32 percent of households headed by someone age 65 to 74 were carrying home-mortgage debt in 2004. It can be tempting to dip into your 401(k) or IRA to pay it off. But mortgages shouldn't be paid off in the absence of other savings. "You need to have a balanced approach of keeping that retirement savings robust and also have regular savings for emergencies so you don't turn to the credit cards if your refrigerator or furnace breaks down," Neiser says. Also, pay off higher-interest debt like credit cards and car loans before your mortgage. "If you have your money tied up in a paid-off mortgage, in order to access that equity which is in your house, you have to go pay the bank to get your money [by refinancing the loan]," says Elisabeth Plax, a Beachwood, Ohio, financial planner and wealth manager for Plax & Associates Financial Services. "If you invest it, all you have to do is liquidate it" by selling.

Consider tax breaks. The interest you pay on your home mortgage is tax deductible on up to $1 million in debt. You can also typically write off interest on up to $100,000 of home-equity debt. But you benefit from this tax perk only if all your itemized tax deductions, including your mortgage interest, add up to more than the standard deduction that almost everyone gets automatically. For 2008, the standard deduction amounts are $5,450 for singles, $10,900 for couples, and $8,000 for heads of households.

Tags:
mortgages,
retirement

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The big issue is paying off mortage or contributing to 401K.

My wife and my jobs are very stable, meaning we have a very low chance of losing them in the future. With our jobs we both receive large pensions (Education) and with the large Pensions it wouldn't be as crucial for us to invest in IRA's. What are your thoughts on trying to pay off our 300,000 mortage with a 5% Interest rate???

Struggling with this thought and a lot of the responses don't include pensions.

Dale of PA 8:46PM March 03, 2010

The point that most miss when touting the mortgage deduction is that one should only include the interest deduction that excludes the standard deduction. Using $10,000 in mortgage interest gets absolutely nothing in tax savings for a miarried filing joint return, as they already have a standard deduction that exceeds the mortgage interest. So you wind up paying $10,000 interest for the mortgage and essentially save $0. Maybe the mortgage interest would benefit a little if it took the total deductions to, for example, $16,000, but it is still spending a lot to save a little. When we paid off our mortgage several years ago I received the same kind of "advice" from a planner about the tax deduction. When I asked him about the standard deduction and why he was using the total interest instead of using only the amount over the standard deduction he remained silent. That was when I fired the adviser and paid off the mortgage.

Tom of CO 1:44PM January 09, 2010

Elementary math shows you are money ahead by paying off your mortgage. ONLY AFTER:

1. All other debt is paid off first(cars, credit cards, consumer loans, etc.)

2. You have 3-6 months of EXPENSES saved in an emergency fund.

3. You are investing at least 10% of you income into a 401K or Roth.

Steps 1, 2, & 3 have to be done one at a time and completed in that order. Don't start 2 until 1 is done....

Here is the math: For EXAMPLE

Let's say you have mortgage and are paying $10,000 per year in interest on that loan.

Assume you are in the 25% income tax bracket.

You would be able to write off $2,500 or 25% of the $10,000 you paid in interest on you mortgage.

So, what you are doing is paying $10,000 to the bank so you can get $2,500 tax break at the end of the year.

For those of you who think this is a good deal, I'd be happy to take $10,000 of your money and then give you back $2,500.

Bottom line, pay off your outstanding debts (and don't accumulate more).

Save 3-6 months of your household expenses in a rainy day fund.

Invest 10% of your income in either a 401K/457/403 Roth etc.

And then pay off that damn mortgage! Think of the money you would have each month if you had no car loans, credit cards, or a house payment....

Mike of TX 11:24AM November 24, 2009

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