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My wife and I have $1.8 million saved and earn $400K. I want to pay off our 20-year mortgage before we retire. She says no - MarketWatch

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Dear Quentin,

My wife and I have done very well working in healthcare the past 25 years. We’ve always taken advantage of 401(k) and 403(b) to the max, and have additional savings in an IRA and almost no revolving credit debt. We currently have $1.8 million in these savings accounts.

However, at 52, we decided to move to Florida — now that our kids are both grown and on their own — rather than wait until retirement. We both still work and together make over $400,000 a year. We plan to work until 65 at minimum and have never had serious health problems.

At issue: We bought a house at the very top of our desired range and have a 20-year mortgage (2.5% interest) with a monthly payment of over $4,100. We have always paid extra on our mortgages, and my goal was to do the same with this house so that by the time we hit retirement at 65, it is paid off.

However, my wife says we will have plenty of money once we hit retirement age to maintain the house payment for the first five to six years of retirement, and that we shouldn’t “penny pinch” now that we have time to travel, even before we fully retire.

I understand that we are blessed to have such a nice nest egg, but I worry that stretching that house payment into our first five years of retirement will eat a huge chunk out of the retirement funds that could jeopardize longer-term planning. We also plan on this house being the bulk of the “inheritance” for our two children, so don’t plan on selling and moving once we finally make the retirement plunge.

Thoughts on how to approach this mortgage conundrum?

Two Pharmacists in Florida

You can email The Moneyist with any financial and ethical questions related to coronavirus at qfottrell@marketwatch.com, and follow Quentin Fottrell on Twitter.

Dear Pharmacists,

This is a win-win. You’re charmed if you do, and you’re charmed if you don’t. And you are charmed. Not only do you both earn good livings, but you have a mortgage at 2.5%. That puts you in a very comfortable decision to rest easy for now.

This column often leaves readers flabbergasted. “I can’t believe this crazy situation!” readers say as they try to process some letter writers’ misdeeds or familial shenanigans. “Who would do something like that?”

It’s a pleasure to read a letter where people have actually done so much right. You’re in a financially secure position and, in a worst-case scenario, you could always downsize from your current home.

Your dilemma is partly subjective, partly math. There is an argument to be made that we don’t know whether any of us will be here by the time our mortgages are paid off, so why not fulfill our obligations and enjoy all that life has to offer.

Given the interest you will undoubtedly save by paying off your mortgage early, even at 2.5% interest. Overpay some if you can, especially early on in the lifetime of the loan when the interest-rate payments are higher.

Depending on the terms of your mortgage, you may be limited on the amount in overpayments you can make (10% in some cases), and as frustrating and galling as it seems, there may also be a penalty for overpaying. In your case, that’s a good thing.

If you don’t overpay? Your tax-advantaged retirement savings will be doing a lot of the heavy lifting for you, especially given the size of your 401(k) — far above the national average for your age — and your high six-figure salaries.

The size of your remaining mortgage, the rate of return on your retirement savings, and the value of the house will obviously all play a role. An adviser could help you forensically draw up two separate scenarios, so you can better choose.

In the words of one reader who advocates shoring up your retirement funds: “I don’t think it is likely that inflation will stay below 2% as it has for a couple of decades; it is more likely to go a bit higher. At 3%, the mortgage is printing money.”

Even taking an average return of 6% on your 401(k), plus each of your Social Security payments, and inflation, you would still have enough to live comfortably and pay down your mortgage and/or downsize if you wish.

Given your high expected retirement savings of close to $5 million by the time you retire, and an annual income of more than $190,000, which does not include a substantial Social Security, your house won’t seem the burden it does today.

By emailing your questions, you agree to having them published anonymously on MarketWatch. By submitting your story to Dow Jones & Company, the publisher of MarketWatch, you understand and agree that we may use your story, or versions of it, in all media and platforms, including via third parties.

Check out the Moneyist private Facebook FB group, where we look for answers to life’s thorniest money issues. Readers write in to me with all sorts of dilemmas. Post your questions, tell me what you want to know more about, or weigh in on the latest Moneyist columns.

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