OP, as long as you have a plan of what to do with the 100/month, I'd just start paying it off. Perhaps you could start slow...pay an extra 100/month as a principal payment? Ooh, if you can add regularly to the 7K you have sitting there, you could just keep building the 7K back up even as you send in extra principal.
I used to enjoy having a bunch of money sitting there, but now, if I have a place to send it, I like to send it.
But if you can see the interest you're paying, and it's an acceptable trade-off, then....as I've read on the DR boards, there's a reason why it's called *personal* finance.
This is an interesting thread. I want to take a chunk of money and pay off our DVC or the car but my husband wants to invest it. I do the monthly bills, though, and understand how great it would be to not have those 2 payments. They are our last thing to being debt free! (Well, besides the house)
I think that you are on the right track.
Since you're nearly debt free and obviously have a plan for the montly payment money once no one is asking for those monthly payments, you could easily just get that money after paying them off, and THEN invest in something. That way, if you lose all the invested money, at least you won't also have a car and DVC payment, ya know?
I'm curious. About how much is a monthly note, financed through DVC? I know it all depends on the percent of finance. I'm just trying to get a ballpark figure.
I don't ever mind (over)sharing. 160 points, BLT, last March prices. Put down 1700, I believe, and we got the preferred interest rate. Our payment (this isn't including the dues, that is a separate payment) is 226.92. We found that to be quite reasonable for what we are getting, and it's ridiculously easy to make extra payments on the principal, as long as you don't have a pending payment (so for about 3 business days each month you can't make a principal payment online).
As long as people are realistic as to what the financing adds to the purchase, it is all good.


