Thanks for your response! I don’t have a second loan on the house. It is all one loan now, paid at a fixed interest over 15 years with no pre-payment penalty. I am not actually sure I understood fully what he was talking about, but I think he said that the bank would not refinance that low without increasing the principle a little bit. Basically, I shopped around a little and asked the bank to match the lowest offer I found online. This is how they were able to do it.
I know math says pay off the highest interest rate loan first, but I get really confused with the deductions. The business loan has the interest deductible, but that is only a few thousand dollars a year at this point. I honestly don’t know how much interest the mortgage gets yearly, but I assume it will be higher now since the loan is brand new again. But that is personal account (after tax) dollars and not pre tax dollars like the business. Does that change things?
Maybe a combo is the best way to go. That way I feel good about getting everyone’s principle down a little bit.
Math does say highest interest first. However, student loans come with onerous terms and that should be taken into consideration as well. Its also unsecured which your business and home arent, and the interest deduction, etc...
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