My situation:I recently landed a salaried job starting at 35k a year. I'm currently living at home so I have no bills but a cell phone bill really.I have a student loan of about 10k I need to pay off but with the current housing market, i'd love to get out the parents house but I would miss saving all this money while living at home. I also thought about buying a nice car to drive then sell it to buy a house later on.Not sure what I should get busy doing first.
12/15/2008 2:48:46 AM
Get outta debt asap.Trying to put furniture in a new house is an expensive process.Also, Im not sure what kind of house youre going to qualify for making 35k a year. You MIGHT qualify for a condo, at most a townhouse.Find a rich girlfriend, marry, then buy a house.
12/15/2008 3:00:58 AM
Pay off that debt asap, then move out. The economy wont be booming in 9 months.
12/15/2008 3:12:35 AM
more info is needed.if the loan is at a really low rate, it might not be worth paying off early since the interest is tax deductible.at the same time, 35K is a good salary but will not get you a very large pre-approval. So really, i'd go talk to a bank and see what they pre-approve you for, and see if you actually can like living in a place like that (ie can you get a good place or is is going to be bad). Most first-time mortgages are gone now, aka you need to have 10-20% down, and having bought a house, there are TONS of 'little' things (paint, furniture, moving, stocking the fridge, BUYING a fridge even) that come up too.
12/15/2008 3:14:56 AM
The loan:It's a Fed Student Aid loan. I owe exactly: $14,500.00 at a 6.8% interest rate.The house:I agree with outfitting the house w/ furniture, etc will be expensive. The girl im currently dating is making pretty good money as well. We even played around with a "married" budget the other day but it'll be awhile before anything like that happens.I'll get this loan taken care of I do believe.[Edited on December 15, 2008 at 3:26 AM. Reason : ss]
12/15/2008 3:25:36 AM
12/15/2008 3:33:49 AM
as long as its free and your girl don't care - do not move out of your parents house35k ain't what it used to be
12/15/2008 3:36:38 AM
I recommend for most of my frat bros who just graduated to move back home, pay the rents a few hundy a month, and live there for a year or two (barring you dont have a gf, or she dont care)
12/15/2008 4:52:46 AM
I also have this problem. I'll be graduating in about 6 months. I'll have about 50K at around 5% interest in student loan, and I'll be making around 110K. Should I just go ahead and pay off my student loan or should I save the money to buy a house instead?
12/15/2008 5:17:14 AM
The Democrats are going to make it a priority to reduce the interest rate on student loan repayment. It might be prudent to pay it down once that passes.
12/15/2008 5:54:35 AM
Pay the loan! you have to do it anyway. When its paid off keep making that payment to yourself and watch the $$ stack up. Then you have a nice down payment for a house, car, mailorder bride, whatever.
12/15/2008 7:47:38 AM
I've heard when renting/living with your parents etc, to pay yourself the difference in rent paid now vs the mortgage you'd be comfortable with into a money market or even revolving CDs. Then you're saving for down payment/house expenses. Also, go ahead and fully fund your 401k, or if not eligible yet, open and fully fund an IRA. If you're living at home for free, then you can do this and still pay extra on the student loans.
12/15/2008 7:59:53 AM
6.8% seems really, really high for a student loan.....how long have you been out of school? How many loans do you have? Can you consolidate them?I had about 4 loand totalling ~10k when I graduated (in 2003). I used a service, not sure from who - CFI i think - to consolidate them, and got a 2.0% rate on them. Then I set up autopay and they dropped it to 1.75%, then after two years of not missing a payment they dropped it to 1.5%. I'm paying that shit off as slowly as possible. so, yeah - i would work oin getting a lower rate
12/15/2008 8:11:46 AM
if you have that opportunity to live at home i'd look at paying the loan off and just start/keep setting aside a little money each month towards an eventual down payment down the line.Myself? I have 25k left in student loans at about 5.5% , with a 65 salary. I'm planning to just keep paying the student loans monthly like I do now with my automatic draft of $350 and just kind of "forget" about them and let them run their course because I want to get a house next year when I get married. I'm at 20% in my 401k and putting $500 a month into savings (with most of it planned to go towards a house down payment).I wish I didn't have the student loans but my interest rate isnt bad and it is dropping over time. I forget what it will settle at but its pretty good.
12/15/2008 8:15:12 AM
if the garage threads are any indication, it doesnt matter what we tell you, you are going to do whatever you want
12/15/2008 8:24:38 AM
payoff the loan only because 6.8 is hella high.
12/15/2008 9:43:41 AM
Is it better to consolidate asap after you graduate or wait until your grace period is over?
12/15/2008 10:03:26 AM
milk the free rent and food at your parent's as long as possible
12/15/2008 10:07:19 AM
^^go ahead and find out what rate you can get for consolidation. probably no point in waiting for the grace period
12/15/2008 10:46:41 AM
how much do you have saved? if it's something close to $0 it's probably better to wait it out at your parents a little longer if they'll let you
12/15/2008 10:48:49 AM
12/15/2008 10:54:43 AM
Pay off that loan. Don't worry about buying a house - in a few years, they will still be just as affordable.
12/15/2008 11:06:32 AM
12/15/2008 11:08:00 AM
#1 is to pay off whatever debt you have.
12/15/2008 11:10:21 AM
pay off the loan so it is off your credit, then you will be able to get a better interest rate on said house or car.and just so you know, $35k will go real quick when you tack on a mortgage payment and a car payment. i mean REAL quick.[Edited on December 15, 2008 at 11:14 AM. Reason : a]
12/15/2008 11:12:57 AM
lol a 6.8% interest rate is NOT highstretch that 10,000 over 20 years and you won't even NOTICE your monthly loan payments--that's like $10 a week while ignoring inflation[Edited on December 15, 2008 at 12:24 PM. Reason : .]
12/15/2008 12:23:13 PM
6.8% is relatively high for a student loan. Not necessarily bad for a home or car loan, historically at least. Even so, over 10-20 years, you're still paying $75-125/mo
12/15/2008 12:28:00 PM
wholly paying off $10k in student loans at this point in your life is a huge mistakedon't do it
12/15/2008 12:36:19 PM
^ that, i completely agree with. All this talk about "get out of debt before _____" shouldn't apply to student loans. If you're carrying $5k on a credit card at 19% or 29% (not uncommon rates), pay that shit off ASAP. But student loans at decent rates are meant to be paid back over the long term. That said, I would still go through http://www.cfnc.org/ or someone to try to lower the rate as much as you can.-----ah shit, this suckshttp://www.cfnc.org/paying/loan/info_consolidation.jsp
12/15/2008 12:50:32 PM
I guess some of y'all haven't taken out student loans recently. They raised the rates in 2006.
* The interest rate on Stafford loans first disbursed beginning July 1, 2006 is fixed at 6.8%.* Subsidized Stafford loans for graduate and professional student and all unsubsidized Stafford loans is 6.8%.* Subsidized Stafford loans for undergraduate students has a declining fixed interest rate. o July 1, 2008–June 30, 2009 the interest rate is 6%. o July 1, 2009–June 30, 2010 the interest rate is 5.6%. o July 1, 2010–June 30, 2011 the interest rate is 4.5%. o July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 the interest rate is 3.4%. o Beginning July 1, 2012 the rate is 6.8%.
12/15/2008 2:07:55 PM
Pro-tip: When it debt, don't go out of your way to increase the amount of debt you're in.
12/15/2008 2:19:21 PM
^I agreePay off your student loans while you dont have any other expenses. You should knock that out very quickly.You also need to build up some savings before you consider buying a house.I would probably want to rent a small place or get a roommate before living at home for an extended period of time. But thats just me, I lean towards independent.
12/15/2008 2:49:37 PM
yea but if you are renting a small place for like $700 that could be a mortgage payment on a small condo, too. so wouldn't it be better to put the money towards something that builds equity than like go rent some place while you pay it off?? or just stay at home. but i mean renting just seems dumb, too IF you could purchase a place with a similar mort. payment.also cars aren't good debt (if you would be doing car payments, which it seems like you would). new cars are REALLY horrible debt. i would go for a house/townhouse before a new car any day (regardless of the loan thing)p.s. what kind of job did you just get? because even though a lot of lenders are doing away with consolidation right now, there are some other good programs taking effect in summer 09 for repayment, depending on what type of job you're in.[Edited on December 15, 2008 at 3:02 PM. Reason : .]
12/15/2008 3:00:43 PM
12/15/2008 3:03:51 PM
12/15/2008 3:11:11 PM
that's cause you are an old man, man
12/15/2008 3:13:12 PM
yeah, mine is 3.0 but with rates dropping like they have been CFI has been charging 2.5% for the past year or so.
12/15/2008 3:13:52 PM
^^ very true. I guess things were a lot different in 1996
12/15/2008 3:18:14 PM
Skack:You stated earlier that he might have problems qualifying for a house with 14,500 in debt and a 35k salary? I have 25k in student loans and 65k income as stated earlier and from the people I have talked to casually (my fiance's parents are both CPAs and her mom is a CPA and a real estate agent) they seemed to think I would have no problem qualifying for a good house loan anyways. My credit score is sitting right at 800 averaged over the sites that annual credit report uses.What is your take on this? I understand the debt to credit ratio is important, but that should already be reflected in my true credit score correct?[Edited on December 15, 2008 at 3:27 PM. Reason : ]
12/15/2008 3:24:37 PM
12/15/2008 3:26:36 PM
payoff the loan, then save for the house.It will still be a buyer's market from the looks of things and you want to make sure you can put down 20% on a standard mortgage.Don't buy into that ARM crap. Look at what is happening to those guys now.also don't go nuts on a car.For one thing, if you are just starting a job you don't know if it's1: a good place to work. Your boss and co-workers could turn out to real dicks.2: a job that last through the recessionIn other words, don't paint yourself into a corner that you will be stuck in.
12/15/2008 3:43:39 PM
do not pay off your loan, or else you're going to spend 3 years getting that $10,000 back in savings. that's 3 years you could have owned a homein either event it's a lot harder to get 20% when you spend $10,000 on something else..[Edited on December 15, 2008 at 3:46 PM. Reason : .]
12/15/2008 3:46:07 PM
12/15/2008 3:54:43 PM
12/15/2008 4:52:24 PM
if you're planning on living in your home for, what is it, 8 years or more? it's smarter to own then rent. you should not buy a home unless you put down 20%, that's for sure
12/15/2008 4:57:13 PM
12/15/2008 5:08:14 PM
yeah, if you don't think you'll spend more than $700 a month check out the home ownership woes thread. you're also forgetting homeowner's insurance, property taxes, utilities that you have to pay for all by yourself. and that assumes nothing breaks. something always breaks. when you rent, you call the landlord. when you buy, you get out your credit card.i'm about to drop $1700+ on property taxes. even if you escrow you still have to pay that every year. there's nothing "ding ding ding" about owning a house.
12/15/2008 5:13:57 PM
my first reaction is to save up for a house (+20% down pmt if possible), and then pay down the 6.8% student loan as much as you can.also,
12/15/2008 5:18:03 PM
autotrader is hit or miss...more misses than hits.try craigslist.and don't spend more than about $5000-6000 or so on a car until you get your finances into place a little more.Personally, if you can stomach living at home (I couldn't, but that's just me), do it and save the money. The interest rate on those student loans is high enough to justify (to me) paying them off faster than the minimum, but you don't need to go totally berserk and put everything else on the back burner.I would do this (and you prob won't have enough money to do all of it...I'm listing in priority order)1. Cash savings until you have a few months of living expenses put away2. 401k to the max extent that your employer offers a match3. Max out Roth IRA (we can talk about what to put in it later/in another thread)4. Pay down student loans, but not so much that you totally inhibit...5. Continuing to add cash to your emergency fund, which will eventually go towards a house DP.Yes, it's a good time to buy a house, but not if you're just starting your first "real" job making $35k/year. Get a big chunk of cash put away (say 10% DP plus a few months of living expenses. 20% is better, but that would take a lot longer), invest for retirement (at least to the level of maxing a Roth IRA and doing the 401k to the extent of any matching), and THEN you can worry about a house.If it hasn't occured to you yet, it's going to take a little while, and it might involve renting some place with a roommate or two in the interim. I mean, I'm almost 30, make over double what you're making, have a full year's salary put away in cash and a bunch more in investments, no debt of any kind, and I'm planning on renting a room in a friend's house when I get back from Iraq. Don't be in such a hurry--you don't need to buy a house yet. It will only financially cripple you at this stage in the game.[Edited on December 15, 2008 at 5:48 PM. Reason : in other words, "D"...none of the above. Save cash and buy stocks (in mutual/index funds)]
12/15/2008 5:44:47 PM
12/15/2008 6:35:15 PM