I have found choosing a student loan repayment option to be one of the most difficult money matter decisions to make. Probably because I feel a little hopeless about them and it seems like a ton of money no matter how I slice it. The advice I have been given is to keep them on my current 25 year repayment plan, but I am starting to consider changing to the level 10 year repayment plan.
Student loan facts: I have an ~$79000 balance on my loans as of right now (that hurts to type after more than 3 years of paying.) I currently pay $598/month and they are scheduled to be paid off in 2037. I am awaiting the final numbers which will take a few days but it should be right around a $1100-1200/month payment to get them paid off in Feb. 2022 (so 7 years vs 22 years with around a 600/month increase in payment.)
We do have the availability in the budget to do this, but it will slow our other savings goals. So it's not really a matter of needing to see how we can afford them, its a matter of what do I do with our money right now. Once H starts getting the full rate at his new job (in one month) we will have ~2200/month leftover after regular expenses (with my current 25 year repayment plan)
We currently have almost enough in our e-fund to cover 3 full months of expenses living exactly how we live now I'm not sure if we should be going for more like 4-6 months fully funded. I would say my job is very secure. H is pretty secure, but there is a possibility he could be laid off for a couple of months over the winter (though the odds are low and he would 100% get his job back within 2-3 months) in which case we would change our lifestyle a bit as well. When I say 3 months expenses I mean if we both lost our job.
In terms of retirement, I do not have access to a 401k through my work but I will be fully funding an IRA. Right now we are putting $400/month into it, but would need an extra $700 at the end of the year to max it out. H will be getting a pension through his retirement (100% of the average of his 3 highest earning years, plus I will get 30%) I would like to fund an IRA for him too this year.
We also need to consider saving for a new car as mine is very high mileage right now.
We currently rent but want to buy a house in probably 3 years (there are a lot of non financial reasons we would not be purchasing before then)
So I guess my question is what do we do with the ~2200 we have left over each month?
option A) use ~600 of that towards my student loans, 600 towards our IRAs, then split the other 1000 between e-fund and car savings
option

keep paying my current student loans, put 600 towards our IRAs, then split the other 1600 among savings accounts
option C) keep paying my current student loans, put 600 towards our IRAs, then split the remaining between savings accounts and some investments (because my retirement contributions are limited & low)
option D) I'm sure there are other combinations of things I could do here
Sorry for all the information, I tried to give a broader picture of where we are at. I know we would save a lot by paying off my loans faster but I'm not sure if we should be more concerned with an e-fund, investing and saving for a down payment on a house right now. Thanks in advance.
Re: WWMMD: Student loan repayment options
I'm not a huge fan of debt (ETA what I meant was I'm debt adverse... who is actually a fan of debt?! That was a dumb thing to say), currently working to pay off my student loans as well, so I would be inclined to throw all the extra money towards the loans to get them paid off. It will help a lot to have them paid off before you buy a house because you can save more for a down payment and you'll have less debt when applying for a mortgage and/or if an emergency were to happen and you had to live off one income while having a mortgage. I would work in this order stop savings (other than retirement) to pay off loans, once the loans are paid off I would fully fund retirement (10-15%) for both of you and then start saving for a car/house.
I agree with PP that you should just repay them faster without changing your repayment terms. It's a good back up just in case.
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