Submitted by figs1023 t3_yiiuk0 in personalfinance
I'm trying to develop a tax-efficient strategy for investing, saving, and retiring.
My main concern is - should I be saving all my cash for my house down payment? Or should I be taking advantage of investing during this time and open an HSA, max out my Roth contributions, etc? Should I be investing my down payment or have it in cash, CDs, or Treasuries?
- Age: 30
- After-tax income: $65,000
- Current Cash Savings: $6,000
- Annual 401K contribution: $1,000 (my employer match is $1,000 per year)
- Current 401K investment balance: $9,350 (I was previously contributing a large amount of my paycheck)
- House down payment Goal: $150,000. I live in California and the house will most likely be around $1,000,000. My partner and I would go 50/50 on the house and the down payment. We would probably utilize a conventional loan and use some kind of first-time homebuyer program. Splitting it 50/50 this way will leave me with a $350,000 loan balance which equates to a $2,446 monthly payment at current interest rates (7.5% - hopefully we can re-finance later)
- Student Loans: $11,717, an interest rate of 3.5% (this is assuming that the student loan forgiveness passes.
- Credit Cards: I have a Chase Freedom Unlimited and Discover IT. Pay balance in full each money.
- Expenses: food, travel, gas, and insurance: Roughly $15,000/year (I live with my partner's parents and have no rent payments, I also own my car)
- Taxable Brokerage: $380 (I just started investing and DCA'ing into VTI (I buy 1 share every 2 weeks regardless of share price)
- HSA, Roth IRA, Traditional IRA: Currently not using these accounts and have no money in any of these. Think maybe I should start maxing my HSA and Roth.
Werewolfdad t1_iuiuyee wrote
Https://www.reddit.com/r/personalfinance/wiki/commontopics