ruadisneyfan2
DIS Legend
- Joined
- May 20, 2006
- Messages
- 17,171
I agree. I know a few people who it seems were just in denial that they’ll ever retire and still spend like a drunken sailor, but it’s a rare few, not the majority. Most people I know on the downhill side of their 50’s are coasting along and with their children grown and mortgage-free they are enjoying having much fewer mandatory costs in their lives.i wonder/worry about the issue of income with older people.
yes, at this point in time the numbers show that 'older' (read as 'boomers') have more discretionary income than other age groups but i look at my peers (i was born near the end of the boom-so many of us are just turning 60 this year) and their financial situations are DRASTICALLY different than senior populations that have preceded us. so many of my peers are nowhere near being mortgage free because they bought into the whole 'buy a house, buy a better house, buy the 'bestest' house' concept such that they are still fairly early into their most recent 30 year mortgages. combine that with their choice to fully fund their kid's college educational desires by either neglecting their own retirement savings or taking on parent plus loansand pre-retirement they are struggling to keep their heads above water. all of this being their own personal choices but they are now finding that when retirement comes (for most) they have lower incomes but continued long term debt, higher health care costs and all the same life sustaining expenses that everyone (young w/kids and old) need to survive-utilities, food, transportation...
it's telling that my state (washington) has looked at the current senior population's inability NOW to provide for themselves and is instituting a mandatory long term care employment tax to provide 'something' (terrible overall dollar amount benefit) for what they anticipate will be an increasing unmet financial issue for seniors.
it's scary-BEFORE the pandemic (february 2020) there was a study released that showed that debt among those americans 70 and older had grown 543% between 1999 and 2019 (those in their 60's by 471%). 1 in 5 bankruptcies was someone over 65 (a 5 fold increase in the last 2 1/2 decades). given the number of seniors that were getting by working in jobs that due to the pandemic either no longer exist or create too great a risk to their health i have to imagine the amount of debt in this group has skyrocketed
i'll echo that there's no better feeling than owning your own home outright but i wouldn't (couldn't bring myself to) do it absent a healthy amount in accessible savings. it's great having that extra $$$$ each month, be it to knock out other debt/throw towards retirement/just enjoy BUT i've known a few too many who take all their accessible monies (the non retirement stuff that they won't get hit with a big penalty/tax bill for withdrawing), pay off their mortgage and then never entirely get around to replenishing that cash reserve and then something comes up-major appliance or house issue uncovered by insurance, major car repair or replacement, hours get cut at work...while not having that mortgage payment has relieved some of the stress, not having any reserve funds to cover yourself brings the only options being either taking on more credit card debt or a home equity loan (which really-it's just another version of a mortgage).
ymmv.
I agree with having a good emergency fund before paying down the mortgage.
I used part of our EF to pay off our mortgage but those were the last few payments, not early on in my pay down plans. I will have one part ($10k) paid back by Jan 1. Then were are cruising a bit, and I’ll have the other part ($17k) paid back by the end of the year. Our debt snowball and setting goals for it are so well ingrained in me now that I can’t see myself going hog wild with spending.
I sleep much better with lots of $$ in the bank.


I also have a goal to hopefully be able to switch to part time for my last 5-8 years of working. I’m not at all prepared to do that now and know I’ll need an extra hefty EF for that because any withdrawals would be paid back more slowly.