Mrs. Ciz
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 17, 2011
- Messages
- 3,816
I am going to go against the grain here...
I say invest the whole inheritance in an account you will not touch. Lock it away for a very long time! Keep paying off you credit cards as you had planned without the inheritance money. Yes, it will cost you more in interest than paying them off now, but I would still do it that way. A large lump sum of money is VERY hard to build and so easy to spend. Most people will make sure they pay their bills, but often, even with the best intentions, will not ever completely pay themselves back (or save money) because things always come up. The mindset often becomes if you don't pay the cc company, you get in trouble, if you don't pay yourself, no big deal.
A lump sum inheritance is one key to building family wealth, the kind that grows through compounding and can be passed on from generation to generation. In addition, I have always had a very hard time justifying spending inheritance money on any non appreciating asset (bills, cars, vacations). Once it's gone, it's gone.
Again...just wanted to give you a totally different perspective.
I say invest the whole inheritance in an account you will not touch. Lock it away for a very long time! Keep paying off you credit cards as you had planned without the inheritance money. Yes, it will cost you more in interest than paying them off now, but I would still do it that way. A large lump sum of money is VERY hard to build and so easy to spend. Most people will make sure they pay their bills, but often, even with the best intentions, will not ever completely pay themselves back (or save money) because things always come up. The mindset often becomes if you don't pay the cc company, you get in trouble, if you don't pay yourself, no big deal.
A lump sum inheritance is one key to building family wealth, the kind that grows through compounding and can be passed on from generation to generation. In addition, I have always had a very hard time justifying spending inheritance money on any non appreciating asset (bills, cars, vacations). Once it's gone, it's gone.
Again...just wanted to give you a totally different perspective.