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Posted

Mazel Tov. When I paid off my mortgage in DC, I had to start paying my property taxes directly to the DC government rather than having them included in the mortgage payment. Writing those semi-annual checks is painful as the property taxes in DC are exorbitant. And the Trump $10,000 deduction cap on state and property taxes hits really hard, especially for those of us in "blue" jurisdictions.

Posted
Mazel Tov. When I paid off my mortgage in DC, I had to start paying my property taxes directly to the DC government rather than having them included in the mortgage payment. Writing those semi-annual checks is painful as the property taxes in DC are exorbitant. And the Trump $10,000 deduction cap on state and property taxes hits really hard, especially for those of us in "blue" jurisdictions.

 

Just another little gift from the Trump administration.

Posted

Congratulations! I am curious though: what was the length of the mortgages? Fifteen years, thirty years? It takes discipline to pay off a mortgage early. I have never lived anywhere long enough to pay off my mortgage during the standard time frame.

Posted
Congratulations! I am curious though: what was the length of the mortgages? Fifteen years, thirty years? It takes discipline to pay off a mortgage early. I have never lived anywhere long enough to pay off my mortgage during the standard time frame.

I have always paid them off before the end-date, but I still have a mortgage to enable a line of credit with my bank. (Not sure I need that now.) I am only disappointed that there were no graphs to explain the payment process. (That was a joke.)

Posted
Congratulations! I am curious though: what was the length of the mortgages? Fifteen years, thirty years? It takes discipline to pay off a mortgage early. I have never lived anywhere long enough to pay off my mortgage during the standard time frame.

 

They have all been thirty year fixed (with no prepayment penalty). Even if I pay it off in five, it's easier to qualify based on a thirty year amortization.

 

Kevin Slater

Posted
Mazel Tov. When I paid off my mortgage in DC, I had to start paying my property taxes directly to the DC government rather than having them included in the mortgage payment. Writing those semi-annual checks is painful as the property taxes in DC are exorbitant. And the Trump $10,000 deduction cap on state and property taxes hits really hard, especially for those of us in "blue" jurisdictions.

 

Yeah the Trump tax plan screwed me hard, and not in a good way. Didn't help the county raised my property tax 50% at the same time.

Posted
I have always paid them off before the end-date, but I still have a mortgage to enable a line of credit with my bank. (Not sure I need that now.) I am only disappointed that there were no graphs to explain the payment process. (That was a joke.)

I should add that here, mortgages are variable, not fixed rate and full recourse, so we can't walk away from a property.

Posted
They have all been thirty year fixed (with no prepayment penalty). Even if I pay it off in five, it's easier to qualify based on a thirty year amortization.

 

Kevin Slater

I see you are capable of disciplining yourself as well as clients:D.

Posted
Mazel Tov. When I paid off my mortgage in DC, I had to start paying my property taxes directly to the DC government rather than having them included in the mortgage payment. Writing those semi-annual checks is painful as the property taxes in DC are exorbitant. And the Trump $10,000 deduction cap on state and property taxes hits really hard, especially for those of us in "blue" jurisdictions.

 

DC's property tax rate is not that bad---half what paid in Atlanta, a fraction of what people pay in Baltimore.

Posted
Not that bad? Hmm .... All I know is that I am shelling out $9,100/year. Ouch.

 

But since the SALT cap is $10K, isn't all $9100 deductible off your federal tax return?

Posted
But since the SALT cap is $10K, isn't all $9100 deductible off your federal tax return?

 

They would be if DC did not have a "state" tax. My combined DC and property tax are significantly in excess of the cap. :-(

My financial advisor tells me to move to a cheaper locale.

Posted
Or in another country that actually has social mobility.

According to the largest survey of millionaires ever conducted:

 

"The overwhelming majority (79%) of millionaires in the U.S. did not receive any inheritance at all from their parents or other family members. While one in five millionaires (21%) received some inheritance, only 3% received an inheritance of $1 million or more."

 

"In fact, the majority of millionaires didn’t even grow up around a lot of money. According to the survey, eight out of 10 millionaires come from families at or below middle-income level. Only 2% of millionaires surveyed said they came from an upper-income family."

 

As much as I don't want this thread thrown into P&R, I couldn't let RealAvalon's assertion go unchallenged.

 

Back on topic, congratulations @Kevin Slater! If you do get any marriage proposals, two words of advice:

"Pre" and "Nup"

Posted
Not that bad? Hmm .... All I know is that I am shelling out $9,100/year. Ouch.

But since the SALT cap is $10K, isn't all $9100 deductible off your federal tax return?

 

Presumably his state (or in this case, DC) income tax is greater than $900, so he's no longer able to deduct all his property and income taxes.

 

Kevin Slater

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