Pay off your mortgage or invest: A homeowner’s dilemma
A mortgage is a big expense, but it’s only one part of your family’s budget. Decisions about it need to be made in the context of your entire situation. For some of us, it makes sense to pay down the mortgage as soon as possible and live debt free. For others, that mortgage is an efficient use of capital—a tax-advantaged way to maximize the “creature comforts” part of a 50-30-20 budget.
The short answer: Your interest rate, tax situation, and your “life security”—including your job security and access to cash—all play a role in the decision. But, from a purely economic standpoint, it’s all about opportunity cost—what you give up (including returns on other investments) when you choose one expenditure over others.
Key Points
- The decision to pay off your mortgage or invest extra funds is based on opportunity cost.
- Start by calculating your effective interest rate and comparing it to what’s available in the market.
- Also think about your current financial situation, including your access to emergency funds and your outlook for future returns.
First things first: Interest and tax rates
If you can make more in interest, dividends, or capital appreciation by investing any extra mortgage payments in an investment vehicle (such as the stock market or a certificate of deposit) than you pay in interest to the mortgage holder, you might consider keeping that mortgage. But what interest rate should you be comparing to the investment vehicles?
The easy answer is to look up the current interest rate on your mortgage. If it’s an adjustable-rate mortgage, make sure you know the terms, including any rate increases and when they’re set to kick in—particularly in a rising-rate environment. Is your mortgage interest rate lower than what you expect to return on other investments?
Next, check if you received a mortgage interest deduction on your last tax return. Ever since they doubled the standard deduction in 2018 (it’s $13,850 for singles and $27,700 for married couples as of the 2023 tax year), few households itemize deductions. If you’re one of those few, your effective mortgage rate might be lower. Let’s look at how that would work.
How do tax brackets work?
Are you confused about marginal tax rates and brackets? Cut through the tax rate jargon.
When you itemize deductions, any deductible amount you pay in interest over and above the standard deduction saves you that amount multiplied by your marginal tax rate. For example, on last year’s tax return, Donna and Bob (married filing jointly) were in the 22% tax bracket. Suppose in the coming year, they plan to itemize deductions with:
- Property taxes: $8,000
- Qualified charitable deductions: $2,000
- Mortgage interest: $25,000
Their itemized total of $35,000 would be $7,300 over and above the standard deduction. So, by holding this mortgage, they save ($7,300 x 22%) = $1,606.
That $1,606 represents the actual savings, in dollar terms. If they wish to determine their net effective mortgage rate, they could look at that $1,606 as a percentage of their outstanding mortgage balance, and deduct that percentage from their rate. For example, if they owe $500,000 on their home, the $1,606 translates to ($1,606 / $500,000) = 0.0032, or 0.32%.
If their mortgage rate is 5%, their effective rate by holding the mortgage is (5% – 0.32%) = 4.68%.
So if Donna and Bob were to weigh the opportunity cost of paying the mortgage, the effective rate is a little lower than the stated mortgage rate. Not a lot—but it might make the difference between holding the mortgage or working to pay it off.
And, again, for the 90% of households (as of the 2022 tax year) that use the standard deduction, the effective rate is the same as the nominal mortgage rate—the mortgage interest deduction doesn’t affect your tax bill.
The advantages of paying down your mortgage
The big advantage of paying off your mortgage is that it frees up money for other uses, such as:
- Cash flow for big expenses and/or day-to-day living. Paying down your mortgage frees up money in your monthly budget, giving you flexibility in managing your money. In some months, you might need that cash flow to pay for a vacation, a property tax bill, or a college tuition bill. In other months, you might augment your retirement savings.
- Reducing high interest expenses. If your effective interest rate is currently higher than the market rate of interest on a savings account or certificate of deposit (CD), paying your mortgage down will save you money. The return is risk free and tax free, too.
- Getting rid of private mortgage insurance (PMI). Even if you don’t have the means to pay off your mortgage completely, if the equity in your home is less than 20% of its value, you might be paying PMI. If you can pay down enough of your mortgage to shed the PMI requirement, you’ll get instant savings, month after month.
- Peace of mind. Debt can be good or bad—it can take you closer to your goals or further from them. But too much debt can feel like an anchor. For some people, a debt-free lifestyle is a key to well-being.
The disadvantages of paying off your mortgage
Although a monthly mortgage payment is a big one, there can be good reasons to keep paying it rather than trying to pay your mortgage off. Among them:
- You need an emergency fund. If you don’t have an emergency fund, then you might have trouble paying for your monthly expenses if something happens to your job or if you have an unexpected expense. Get your rainy-day fund in place before you start looking at other uses for extra money.
- You have a low-rate mortgage. From 2010 through 2020, 30-year mortgage rates hung out below 5%, dropping to the low 3% range during the COVID-19 pandemic. Meanwhile, although stock investing can be volatile, long-term returns on the benchmark S&P 500 Index have been about 9%. Compare the interest you’d save to the potential investment gains if you invested the money instead. If the answer favors investment returns, you’re probably better off saving or investing excess funds rather than putting them toward a mortgage balance.
- You can take advantage of the mortgage interest deduction. Although most people don’t have enough itemized deductions to reach the standard deduction threshold, you may be someone who does. If the mortgage deduction puts you far enough over the standard deduction that you can itemize more expenses, you may be better off keeping it. This may be the case if you have high medical expenses or business expenses that you can deduct—and/or you make sizable charitable donations.
The bottom line
Ultimately, the decision about paying down debt versus investing comes down to opportunity cost—weighing other things you could do with the money. If your after-tax mortgage rate is 4.68%, but you have credit card debt at 22% and an auto loan at 6%, it’s wiser to pay down the credit card and the auto loan rather than the mortgage. That’s called the “avalanche method” for debt repayment.
Similarly, if you can invest your money in a low-risk option yielding more than your mortgage rate, or if you have a long time horizon and are comfortable with higher risk/higher reward investments, you might keep the mortgage intact and invest.
But if you have no other debt, a healthy retirement fund, you don’t itemize your taxes, and/or you just want the peace of mind that comes with being mortgage free—accelerate your mortgage payments, pay that debt off as soon as you can, and don’t look back.