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Are you sure that this is correct?Age: 49
Spouse’s/Partner's age: 48
Annual gross income from employment or profession: €80,000
Annual gross income of spouse: €35,000 (Working 3 days a week)
Monthly take-home pay approximately €5,500
What rate is the car loan?Other borrowings – car loans/personal loans etc:
Car Loan of €7000
No other loans
Savings and investments: €15,000 savings as rainy day fund
Are you sure that this is correct?
Even allowing for your wife's pension contributions your jointly assessed monthly net should be more like €7K by my calculations.
What rate is the car loan?
Almost certainly it would make more sense to clear it using €7K from your "rainy day" fund and then build the latter back up if you really think that you need such a large amount readily available.
Otherwise you're effectively borrowing at car loan rates to have €7K readily available (at deposit rates?).
Yes, college is on the horizon and getting closer so am hoping the mortgage outgoing will help support this. I do keep a high level monthly budget of big outgoings but may need to do a more detailed one for a few months to understand where we are spending.What are your monthly outgoings? Do you and your spouse have a good idea of this currently? In 12 months you will no longer be paying a mortgage and your largest bill will drop off. At 6.5-7K pm income how are you currently using it all up and (saving where you can)?
Once you have a good handle on this, you should at least have the €13K pa that you were using to pay off your mortgage to fund your home improvements. Check with your bank on the cheapest way of funding this, perhaps another small mortgage on the house which might be easier to get while you currently have a mortgage, just check with your bank. But with a repayment capacity of ~€1K pm you should have the €50K paid off in 5 years.
By then you will be 55 but more crucially the kids will be 21 & 18 and you will be in the middle of college going if that is the path they want to take. Will they need to live away from home for college? If you could pay off the home improvement loan before college then you should be able to fund that too. Perhaps your spouse might have moved to full time by then also.
So your ability to fund your pension plans needs to come from your day to day spending - don’t count on the savings from the mortgage to fund it as that will be tied up with the home improvements and college kids for the next decade.
I don't understand this.I had considered paying off the car loan but unfortunately I took this out through he garage as a HP loan and there is minimal savings by paying off early.
I don't understand this.
Well, depends on the contract, sometimes it does make sense to pay it off early. I’m note sure what’s the OP rate on HP.HP means Hire Purchase. So it's not really a loan. Paying it off early does not save much if anything.
I checked with the HP company and there is a saving of about 400 euros by paying off early so doing this now. Maybe I should have gone to my local CU and paying off early would be more beneficial to me. I had compared interest rates when buying the car which seemed consistent across loan providers but I think the HP compound interest was not a good choice. A lesson learned.I don't understand this.
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