AgLA06 said:
permabull said:
I don't really understand the whole "security" of having the mortgage paid off. I am already paying more in property tax and insurance than I am towards the mortgage and when I factor in utilities and repairs, the actual mortgage is probably only 30% of my real housing expense. I'll still lose my house if I don't pay taxes or if I cancel my insurance and the house burns down, having the mortgage paid off doesn't really give me any extra security.
Because that's not the norm. The property is appraised based on market value that starts at what you purchase it for. With the real estate market the last 20 years you would have to have a loan almost at the end of it life (or refinanced out) and never have protested your taxes.
Based on your scenario not paying $300 a year and fighting your property taxes cost you exponentially more.
I am not sure how you reached your conclusions. First, if you've owned a home in a reasonable location in Texas for 10 years or more, this is certainly the norm. I am in the same boat. A low-interest loan, coupled with rising taxes and insurance, along with Father Time almost assures most will end up here.
Second, did he say he didn't protest his taxes? I didn't see that (sorry if I missed it). You can protest all you want, but you won't always win - property tax burdens in Texas have increased significantly as tax assessor valuations (and market values) have increased. So, it is quite possible (even probable?) that taxes and insurance can outsize principal and interest (they do by quite a bit for me, too).
I'm still not sure what your point is? You didn't tie back to the concept of "added security" from paying off your mortgage. I'd say this varies significantly by person, and for people with significant non-home assets, it's not a big impact on overall risk. For people where their home is their primary asset, I'd argue that paying it off and negatively impacting ability to grow other financial assets actually reduces security (and increases real estate value fluctuation risk), in most cases.