OK, the first question I have for the OP is this:
Have you incurred any NEW debt...is your monthly budget balanced to live debt free on a monthly ongoing basis?
Same question...rephrased... are you paying off OLD debt?
If you can pay off OLD debt, and NOT continue to incur debt on a monthly basis, then by all means pay off the debt!
However, if your budget isn't balanced and it won't matter that your debt is paid off - SAVE/INVEST the money!
I don't want to imply anything or suggest that your budget isn't balanced
I just wanted to make the point to anyone reading that paying off debt doesn't work when the debt is ongoing, and the budget isn't balanced - so monthly debt accumulation is a habit that MUST be changed to get on the right financial track.
Do you have a good financial planner?
If you don't then.... GET ONE!
There is so much about financial planning that the general population doesn't understand, and doesn't apply to their income, savings, retirement funds etc etc etc
We have a nice nest egg saved, especially for our age... and we were paying a financial advisor literally HALF of what we made on our account last year - and when I realized that I hit the roof!
He called us once a year and sent us a Coffee cake each Christmas...that's it.
I shopped around and found a guy a block from our house that has been absolutely incredible! He called me a week before Christmas to talk about the possible effects of the fiscal cliff mess in the US right now - and at the end of the conversation, I felt as though I had just attended a short financial workshop - and was smarter, JUST because he cared enough about our investments to make a 10-15 minute phone call to assure we knew what was at stake, and what to get our permission to do what was necessary if on December 30th congress continued to sit on their hands.
We are even in a better tax situation because of the way our accounts are invested.
SO, in short - find a great advisor to help you make the right decisions based on YOUR life over the next 50 years.... not on your current financial situation.
IF you could save the amount you are currently paying out each month over the next three years, and it would EQUAL your windfall - then yeah, you are FAR better off paying down the debt. However, if you are looking at more like 10 years to save up what you have in your hands right now, then you might want to reconsider.
Saving and investing when you are young is SO critical to getting to your eventual dollar amount needed to retire comfortably.
It is SUCH a tough decision to think about investing and paying off debt...you see as cash going out the door each month.
BUT you DH is correct that you MAY be better off be saving/investing - BUT depending on your current and foreseeable future financial situation, it MAY be better to wave goodbye to your debt!
SO, I say....... go see a professional financial advisor! You won't regret it! Make a plan!
