- Joined
- Nov 22, 2009
- Messages
- 8,179
- Reaction score
- 8,300
@KCAB are you still buying NIO? The ES7 looks nice with 578 mile range.
It has to be a calculated risk. You have to be prepared for that bad tenant, financially and emotionally.
I am surprised you didn’t get into that rental business with your mortgage and law background. I guess you wanted that student loan forgiveness so you had to hold on to that debt on your record?
My tax money is not enough?
How much money are you going to save with PSLF vs 10 year-plan?
$120 k of “saving” is nothing to sneeze at.
I had $150 k in student loans and paid it off in 3 years. No regrets tho because 1) I would have paid the same amount; 2) By getting rid of my student loan debt, I was able to buy more real estate.
Not every cleaning company is corporate.$50 an hour is one hell of a lot of money to 99.9% of humans on the planet. The median wage is like $18 an hour for full time workers in the US. If you can't make it off of $50 an hour, even with student loans, you either have a spending problem or very specific needs for living that others do not. If you live in extreme cost of living areas, I'd move away ASAP because it's just not worth it. You can live in a small town with good amenities and a short drive from a major city like Allentown, PA. Houses are super cheap, pay is $65/hr+. In fact, they are paying bonuses. CVS can't find enough people to work up there. 2 hours from NYC, 2 hours from Philly.
Cleaning ladies around here make like $14 an hour. Just off of a cursory search on Indeed. Where the hell are cleaning workers making $38/hr?
So the paths we chose were optimal for what we wanted to do, and probably circumstances as well. You needed a clear DTI to make those RE investment purchases. I needed immediate cash flow to improve my time-in-market metric. I also had a year in residency, which meant I had one year of ultra-low payments (counting towards PSLF), and I got to watch my balance balloon to some ungodly amount.
Ignoring residency, if I had prioritized paying off student loans (call it, reasonably, 3 years of living at home/cheaply -- that is a $5900/mo payment, with roughly $8000/mo take home pay 10 years ago with my first job), I would have missed stock market gains from 2012-2015 (~16% YOY). It would have enabled me to buy more RE in 2015/2016, but that wasn't something I wanted to do.
Basically, for everyone else reading this, the point I'm making is that different strategies work for different people, there is a lot of luck involved, but no one method for handling finances fits everyone.
Financially speaking, it depends on the amount of student loan debt. You are going to have a tough time “paying it off asap” if your debt is > $250 k based on a pharmacist salary.
Overall, I agree. But I still maintain that as a pharmacist, priority #1 should be paying student loan debt ASAP, no matter what. When you are in debt, you *need* the pharmacist's salary to keep up with payments. With how uncertain the job market is, you need to minimize monthly expenses as much as possible in the event you get fired, laid off, temporarily disabled, quarter/mid life crisis (like me, lol) etc. After you reduce your expenses as much as possible...then you can think about investments.
180k took me 3.5 years.
Financially speaking, it depends on the amount of student loan debt. You are going to have a tough time “paying it off asap” if your debt is > $250 k based on a pharmacist salary.
See... that's blanket advice that doesn't necessarily make sense for everyone. It's going to depend on a) other resources you have, b) your salary, c) your loan balance, d) your potential qualification for PSLF (or whatever other programs might exist out there), e) general life/financial goals.
I even take issue with the *need* for a pharmacist salary to keep up with payments. With how uncertain the job market is, paying off debt is likely not a good use of cash flow, I'd argue it's better to build an emergency fund first, alongside any 401k/403b match. When SHTF, you can always submit an IDR application for a federal loan and bring your student loan payment to zero and still have money to eat.
If you're not going the PSLF route, I think incoming cash should be dealt with in this order: 1) emergency fund until 6 months of basics, 2) 401k/403b minimum to match, 3) retirement of debt.
This dogged, religious obsession with shedding debt at all costs reminds me of that idiot Dave Ramsey.