Money Matters
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DEBT!

Hi, i was just browsing the nest and decided to sign up! my name is Ashley and I live in South Carolina! married with two kids! I have been lurking today and decided to ask a question. How many debts do you all have and how soon will they be paid off? are you all using the DR debt snowball plan? how do you feel about having debt in general?

rright now hunbby and i have personal loan, mortgage, and car loan. we make good money and we have had some life happens moments recently and was thinking about getting another loan just to build the bank account back up just because i am inpatient. Then again, i dont want to create anymore debt! what would you all do?

Re: DEBT!

  • Welcome! The only real debt we have now is our mortgage (we have two 0% store cards that we have set to autopay and we didn't use it as an excuse to overspend - there is cash in savings to back up each of those cards, but we decided not to take money out of interest bearing accounts to pay interest free debt).  We got rid of DH's student loan about 1.5 years ago and we just paid off the car this year. We used a partial snowball - we increased the car payments once the student loan was done, but since we have several home repairs we wanted to take care of we didn't put all of the old loan amount to the car. We also prioritized in order of interest rate not small balance to largest balance. 

    I do not understand what you mean about taking a loan to build your savings - you'll just be paying more in interest for the psychological satisfaction of seeing cash in the bank? Life happens and that's why you have the savings accounts - it's a cycle of saving, "oh crap I can't believe that happened and now that account is drained" and then saving back up again. I would only take a loan if you had a second emergency right after one that drained your reserves and you were desperate. 
  • Welcome!

    We actually just finished paying off a significant amount of student loans this past month ($39,500). We still have a car loan and our mortgage. However, we refinanced to a 20 year mortgage to save on having a lower interest rate and faster pay off.

    I track our debt using ReadyforZero.com. It is great to connect accounts, see balances, track payments and explore different payback options.

    I don't know what you mean by taking out a loan to build up your savings, but please do not take out debt to build savings. That is not a good idea at all because you will have to pay that back.

    I would suggest starting small, build up an emergency savings account of at least $1,000 and then build to 3-6 months of expenses.
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  • Hi, i was just browsing the nest and decided to sign up! my name is Ashley and I live in South Carolina! married with two kids! I have been lurking today and decided to ask a question. How many debts do you all have and how soon will they be paid off? are you all using the DR debt snowball plan? how do you feel about having debt in general?

    rright now hunbby and i have personal loan, mortgage, and car loan. we make good money and we have had some life happens moments recently and was thinking about getting another loan just to build the bank account back up just because i am inpatient. Then again, i dont want to create anymore debt! what would you all do?
    First question, no, we don't have any debt outside of our mortgage which we've just started paying extra on. We did snowball our debt though like Dave Ramsey recommends and got everything paid off pretty quickly. $70k total in student loans and a car loan.

    I don't understand what you're talking about here...and if you're serious about Dave Ramsey and the baby steps then this is completely antithetical to that. No, you should NOT take out another loan in order to feel like you have "more". You don't have more money, you're just more in DEBT.

    Do you have an emergency fund? Start there, Dave recommends $1,000 and then get started on snowballing your debt. Smallest amount to largest.
  • als1982als1982 member
    1000 Comments 500 Love Its Third Anniversary Name Dropper
    edited September 2016
    I hate debt.  We just paid off more than $85,000 of student loans in about 2.5-3 years.  We use the avalanche method versus Dave Ramsey's snowball (paying debts with highest interest first).  We're now on to our mortgage which is currently at $146,000.
    HeartlandHustle | Personal Finance and Betterment Blog  
  • Welcome!

    Our only debt right now is our mortgage and one car loan for the used vehicle we just purchased to replace my husbands old & unsafe SUV.  Our first payment is due in the middle of October and we plan on paying more than the minimum payment from the start to get it paid off early.

    Please don't take out a loan so you have money in the bank!  You may have the money in a bank account but that money (plus interest) will be getting sent right back to the bank to pay off the loan.

    When you say "life happens" are you talking about smallish expenses like replacing tires or a small appliance or are you talking about major expenses like replacing the furnace or roof?

    Most of us on this board are big fans of having an emergency fund available, even if it is just $1,000 to start.  This gives us peace of mind that if an unexpected expense comes up we have some money available to take care of it without getting into debt or stressing about it.

    If you are comfortable doing so, if you post your monthly income and your current expenses/budget we can help you find ways where you can re-prioritize your money so you can feel more comfortable about your finances and a plan for repaying your debt.
    Formerly AprilH81
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  • Welcome!

    We live, eat, and breathe Dave Ramsey's principals.  We're on BS7 and have zero debt.  It's amazing!  We've also lead the Financial Peace University in our church and are gearing up to offer it again this winter.

    So of course I'm going to say yes to doing his plan.  If you haven't already, look to see if there is a FPU class in your area.  I would recommend that first.  If there is not, then buy his book Total Money Makeover.  That gives you step by step instructions on how to do his plan. I also always recommend to listen to his radio show or podcasts.  You can do so online or through the app.
    The plan is very aggressive and that is most definitely debateable.  However, it is a solid plan and forces you to have focused intensity at 1 goal at a time.  This helped keep us moving forward and being aggressive with our debt because we would get little wins along the way.

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  • We have a mortgage and now a car loan, which we are paying extra on. We need a new roof and I'm really unhappy with the idea of having to go into debt to pay for it. Our first estimate (not an official quote. Just a ballpark) was $15,000.  We technically have that in savings but it would pretty much wipe it out, which will make it hard for me to sleep at night. So I'm hoping we can get it to last through the winter and stockpile the cash in the meantime. 
  • Welcome, Ashley!  I'm Jenny, live in New Orleans, and am married with no kids (and no plans for such!).

    My only debt is two mortgages and my Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC).  I also have balances on three credit cards, but they are all 0% interest.  I'll have them paid off before the 0% drops off.

    I'm a little unusual in that I invest in real estate (rentals) to increase my monthly income.  As such, I am not debt adverse at all, IF I am leveraging it to increase my income and gain a fantastic ROI (Return on Investment).

    At this point, I'm focusing on building my rental portfolio to achieve a $5,000/month net cash flow.  Once I hit that goal, than I will start paying off some of the mortgages.  I continually pay down my HELOC with whatever excess funds I have, but then those are the funds I use for my next deal, and the balance goes up again.

    Like the other PPs have said, don't take out a personal loan to bulk up your savings.  Even for people with good credit, personal loan interest rates are typically high.

    If I were in your shoes, this would be my game plan.  Though I'm not saying this is the only right answer:

    If your current savings/emergency fund is so low it is making you all nervous, I'd suggest dropping down to minimum payments, just for now, on your loans and build your e-fund back up to a comfortable level.

    Are you all putting money away for your retirement?  Don't pull back on those funds to increase your e-fund.  Keep them where they are (for now).

    Once you're e-fund is at least at a more comfortable level, then start paying off the personal loan you all currently have first (assuming it is higher interest than the car loan).  Then work on the car loan...unless it is a really low interest rate anyway and then I wouldn't bother, unless it bugged me.

    Once you are debt-free, except your mortgage, max. out your retirement contributions.  If you are at a place where you are already doing that, then start paying the mortgage principal down.

    Caveat, I'm coming from a place where I could care less about paying off the mortgage for my personal residence.  That is the cheapest money anyone will ever find.  Generally speaking, you can take that same money and do much better with it in a relatively safe investment, like bonds/mutual funds/blue chip stocks.

    That is why I put it last on the list above.  With that said, I think just about everyone should own a paid-off home before they retire.  And I could certainly see where there would be a lot of personal satisfaction in paying off one's mortgage.  So, while not my cup of tea, there is certainly nothing wrong with paying some extra principal off and/or putting "paying off the mortgage" higher up the ladder. 

  • smerka said:
    We have a mortgage and now a car loan, which we are paying extra on. We need a new roof and I'm really unhappy with the idea of having to go into debt to pay for it. Our first estimate (not an official quote. Just a ballpark) was $15,000.  We technically have that in savings but it would pretty much wipe it out, which will make it hard for me to sleep at night. So I'm hoping we can get it to last through the winter and stockpile the cash in the meantime. 
    Woof! Definitely get a few more quotes - we paid $8,200 for ours just a couple of years ago and it stood up perfectly to the ridiculously rough 2014-2015 winter we had up here in Boston (I think we were literally the only people we know that didn't end up with expensive ice dam damage). They had to strip 2 layers of shingles, put down plywood (the old roof was so old they needed a sturdy place to nail into), take down an old inactive chimney, and then reshingle. 
  • H and I have a lot of student loan debt from law school, but the payments are comfortable with our income.  We are on a repayment schedule that will have them paid off right before we plan to start looking for our forever home.  We could be more aggressive with them, but we have found a balance between debt repayment, saving/investing, and living life that works for us.

    We also have a mortgage, which I have 0 intention of paying off early because our rate is really good.

    No car loans and definitely no credit card debt. 

    Debt also doesn't bother me, and I do some debt leveraging for our investments now and then.

    I'm not much of a DR fan at all - I disagree with him on a lot of things, and I think his strategies are not very good for wealth building.  Also, a lot of people seem to have trouble seeing past his brand and actually number crunching using their own figures.  All that being said, what you are describing about taking out a loan just to fund a bank account is totally the opposite of what he would recommend, and in this instance I would be in total agreement with him.  You are thinking about borrowing money, paying interest, just to have the money sit in a bank account somewhere earning 0.01% interest and losing value at 1-2% per year due to inflation?  This doesn't make sense to me at all.
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  • julieanne912julieanne912 member
    Fifth Anniversary 500 Love Its 500 Comments Name Dropper
    edited September 2016
    I won't even go into amounts for our debt.  We have a lot... student loans, mortgage (regular and a heloc), 2 vehicles, camper, a toy, and a bit of 0 interest credit card).  

    But, do NOT pull out a loan just to build up your savings.  As others have mentioned, just work on rebuilding your emergency fund.  DR's idea of starting with $1,000 is a good one.  Then, once you get there, you can decide on the next goal.  I personally think some other gurus' advices about having 6 months saved up is so daunting, especially when you're starting from scratch and trying to pay off debt, so a smaller goal is more achievable.  If some emergency pops up that you need cash for and you don't have it, then you can decide then what to do.  If at that point, that means putting it on a credit card or getting a loan then, then so be it.  But taking out debt just to sit there for a "what if" seems really silly.
  • thank you all so very much for your feed back! i just need to be patient and build our savings back up! right now we have 2500.00 and i would like at least 5000.00-7000.00
  • thank you all so very much for your feed back! i just need to be patient and build our savings back up! right now we have 2500.00 and i would like at least 5000.00-7000.00
    What helps for me is doing weekly transfers to savings - it's more motivating to see the balance inch its way up than to wait until I have a large amount to save. When I first started hard core savings I negotiated lots of regular bills down and then immediately divided out that monthly cost savings into a weekly amount and added to to the automatic weekly transfer amount. I kid you not even the $12/month savings on my cell phone bill was translated into a $3 increase in the weekly savings. I made the change once and totally forgot about it! But that was 2 years ago and that is over $150/year in forgotten money that gets saved rather than wasted on something equally forgettable. 
  • thank you all so very much for your feed back! i just need to be patient and build our savings back up! right now we have 2500.00 and i would like at least 5000.00-7000.00
    What helps for me is doing weekly transfers to savings - it's more motivating to see the balance inch its way up than to wait until I have a large amount to save. When I first started hard core savings I negotiated lots of regular bills down and then immediately divided out that monthly cost savings into a weekly amount and added to to the automatic weekly transfer amount. I kid you not even the $12/month savings on my cell phone bill was translated into a $3 increase in the weekly savings. I made the change once and totally forgot about it! But that was 2 years ago and that is over $150/year in forgotten money that gets saved rather than wasted on something equally forgettable. 
    I started out by transferring $50 per paycheck directly into savings, then gradually over time increasing that amount.  We now do a monthly transfer of a larger sum, but the automatic transfer of a small amount really helped to get me started and after a few paychecks I didn't even notice the amount was "missing" from my available funds.

    To the OP, a few areas where a lot of us find savings without cutting out line items are we look for lower insurance rates (cars, homes, whatever policies you have) for equal coverage, try to negotiate your cable bill down or see if you  can get access to the shows you watch for a lower rate (Hulu Plus, Netflix, etc.) and programmable thermostats to save on energy costs.

    I'm also a big fan of budgeting and we use a free app called GoodBudget (a virtual envelope system) to help us track our expenses.  This really helps us know where our money is going, including into savings/retirement, without overspending because we forgot about a large purchase early in the month.

    Please stick around and join in!  You will find that we sometimes disagree on topics but it is always with respect of the other person's viewpoint.  Some here are big Dave Ramsey fans and some are not, some are totally against all debt and some are good with debt leveraging when you can get a good rate, but at the end of the day we are all here to help each other come up with the best strategy to make the most of your money and decrease debt.
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    photo composite_14153800476219jpg

  • Agreed, please stick around.  It's a pretty friendly board.  @Brij and I are about as far opposite as you can get on the DR front, but all is good.  DR works for her, and it doesn't work for me, and neither of us are wrong.

    Also, we rarely get the crazy-pants posts like you often see on reddit/personalfinance (though I admit, I read those for entertainment during my lunch break).

    H and I tend to save in lump sums here and there through the year.  For example, I am paid biweekly and get 2 "extra" pay checks each year.  I also get a cell phone reimbursement twice a year that is meant to cover 6 months' worth of bills, and I get mileage reimbursement every 1-2 months when traveling for work.  We bank all of those things because they feel like "found" money.  We don't actively save each paycheck, but we do transfer anything we haven't spent at the end of the month to savings.  This gives us pretty good flexibility when we have a spendier month.

    Another thing that helps is sinking funds.  If you know you have bills that recur every quarter, 6 months, or annually, divide that payment up into monthly installments and save monthly so that it doesn't blow up your budget when the bill becomes due.  H and I do this for everything from life insurance, annual vet bills, Costco membership, dues for professional organizations, and charitable giving for annual fundraisers.  During the first year it's not perfect, but after 1 year of this you will always have that money in place.

    We also have a separate sinking fund for gifts and another one for clothing, because we noticed those things started blowing up our budget, especially around wedding season and holiday sales.  Since moving to sinking funds we find that shopping for gifts and clothes no longer challenge our budget, and we don't feel guilty for spending that money since it is earmarked.

    Another way to save is to withhold more in taxes and force a refund each year.  I'm not a huge fan of this method because by doing this you are giving the government an interest-free loan.  However, if you tend to raid savings accounts, this is a way to send money to a safe place where you literally cannot access it until you file your tax return.
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  • @hoffse I tried doing sinking funds and frankly just sucked at it! The thing that we created the fund for would come around and we realized we could cash flow it instead so then the fund was just sitting there as a smaller emergency fund. Do you have to force yourself to take the money from the clothes account even if you have the money in your regular checking? I basically gave up and now I have two regular savings accounts - one for expected but irregular expenses (which I only touch if we can't handle the expense with regular cash flow) and the other for "omg I could never have foreseen THAT!" which we've only had to use once so far. 

  • @hoffse I tried doing sinking funds and frankly just sucked at it! The thing that we created the fund for would come around and we realized we could cash flow it instead so then the fund was just sitting there as a smaller emergency fund. Do you have to force yourself to take the money from the clothes account even if you have the money in your regular checking? I basically gave up and now I have two regular savings accounts - one for expected but irregular expenses (which I only touch if we can't handle the expense with regular cash flow) and the other for "omg I could never have foreseen THAT!" which we've only had to use once so far. 

    We are almost at our one year mark of our sinking fund and so far it is working for us, but it isn't perfect.

    We use the sinking fund to pay for satellite radio (annual expense we are getting ready to cancel), lawn care/landscaping (a few larger payments a year) and a few more random annual expenses like our Costco membership.

    Our car insurance has it's own sinking fund combined with a "car maintenance fund".

    Sometimes we will cash flow the expense, like a $20 mulch purchase, but I do like having the sinking fund available for those purchases that are too small to have their own line in our budget but sometimes too big to cash flow.
    Formerly AprilH81
    photo composite_14153800476219jpg

  • @hoffse I tried doing sinking funds and frankly just sucked at it! The thing that we created the fund for would come around and we realized we could cash flow it instead so then the fund was just sitting there as a smaller emergency fund. Do you have to force yourself to take the money from the clothes account even if you have the money in your regular checking? I basically gave up and now I have two regular savings accounts - one for expected but irregular expenses (which I only touch if we can't handle the expense with regular cash flow) and the other for "omg I could never have foreseen THAT!" which we've only had to use once so far. 

    Yep, that's exactly what we do.  We rarely cash flow anything that's part of a designated sinking fund.  We used to cash flow clothing and gifts, but we have found that we overspend if we don't have a preset cap with the money that is in that fund.  I love love designer purses and shoes and would have no difficulty spending thousands per year on them if I had the freedom to do it.  H is the same way with watches and ties.  We realized that we were saying we wanted to spend our money on experiences and travel, but our money was going to clothes and accessories instead, especially at the end of the month when we saw what we had left.  Now if we have $100 leftover it goes to the vacation fund instead of the Kate Spade outlet.

    The other thing is that we really only shop for clothes a few times per year, so it usually amounts to hundreds of dollars at a time, especially when we have to buy/replace suits.  Our bigger shopping sprees were really straining our cash flow before moving to sinking funds.  

    For the annual dues sinking fund, we really just use it for large-ticket items.  Most things under $100 I cash flow.  But anything over $100 gets added to the fund.  The reason we finally went to this method is two-fold.  First, we have about $3,000/year in board dues/donations that we pay in single lump sums during July-September.  That also happens to be when our life insurance premiums are due, and it's right after our car taxes are due.  That much money that fast is not something we can easily cash flow.  Second, before we did the sinking fund I found I was skipping important things just because they cost $100 and I didn't want to spend the money - vet appointments, eye appointments, going to the dermatologist, etc.  Now we don't skip any of them.

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  • Interesting. I might have to try this again particularly for my husband's board game and comic book addiction addictions. It's the one thing we argue about the most (we seriously have about 150 games, many still in the shrink wrap un-played, and yet he keeps buying more! he finds great sales but it is still way WAY too much and there isn't a single room in our house without games). 
  • @LillibetteV We're big about sinking funds as well.  However, for personal things, we budget a certain amount each month for each of us and that gets withdrawn and put into our individual envelopes.  H is a car enthusiast and would spend $10k/year on just modifying his sports cars if I let him.  So we do a "cash sinking fund."  It allows him the freedom to spend it however he see's fit, but once it's gone, it's gone.  Right now he really wants new rims for one of the cars.  So he's been saving and has sold a few other parts to help fund them. 
    I don't have much that I spend on, but I love spending a good chunk of money 2-3 times/year on decorations for the house.  It's nice to have that sinking fund so I can let it build and then spend money on a nice painting I like and not feel guilty.


    We also use sinking funds for insurance, property taxes, car renewals, as well as the 1/4 of a cow we buy once a year and a whole pig. 
    I just use a spreadsheet to keep track of it.

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  • Yeah I like the idea of a home decor sinking fund too.  We haven't started one yet because we have been moving from one larger improvement/remodeling project to the next... but we are awfully close to being done (for now).  I think I will start a decor fund for 2017 for the fun but entirely unnecessary things like art, pillows, etc.
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  • @hoffse That's exactly what this fund is for.  Anything that is considered "improvements" for the house are separate from this.  So a new front door, paint, etc.  It's purely a "décor" fund. lol.  H makes fun of me that I wanted it, but I seriously love that I can get some new fall decorations and not feel guilty about it or blow the budget.  Or if I see a painting I like or want to order a canvas family print, I can.

    However, I don't see his car modifications as something we should spend money on, and he doesn't see my desire to decorate our home as something we should spend money on.  So this is how we both get what we want without it breaking our monthly budget and with there being a cap on the amount spent.

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  • short+sassyshort+sassy member
    2500 Comments 500 Love Its Fourth Anniversary Name Dropper
    edited September 2016
    brij2006 said:
    @hoffse That's exactly what this fund is for.  Anything that is considered "improvements" for the house are separate from this.  So a new front door, paint, etc.  It's purely a "décor" fund. lol.  H makes fun of me that I wanted it, but I seriously love that I can get some new fall decorations and not feel guilty about it or blow the budget.  Or if I see a painting I like or want to order a canvas family print, I can.

    However, I don't see his car modifications as something we should spend money on, and he doesn't see my desire to decorate our home as something we should spend money on.  So this is how we both get what we want without it breaking our monthly budget and with there being a cap on the amount spent.

    Haha!  As I was reading your first paragraph, but before I got to the second one, I was exactly thinking, "Hmph, well I'm sure Brij thinks all the money you spend on your project cars is a little silly."

    It's all about compromise!

  • brij2006 said:
    @hoffse That's exactly what this fund is for.  Anything that is considered "improvements" for the house are separate from this.  So a new front door, paint, etc.  It's purely a "décor" fund. lol.  H makes fun of me that I wanted it, but I seriously love that I can get some new fall decorations and not feel guilty about it or blow the budget.  Or if I see a painting I like or want to order a canvas family print, I can.

    However, I don't see his car modifications as something we should spend money on, and he doesn't see my desire to decorate our home as something we should spend money on.  So this is how we both get what we want without it breaking our monthly budget and with there being a cap on the amount spent.

    Haha!  As I was reading your first paragraph, but before I got to the second one, I was exactly thinking, "Hmph, well I'm sure Brij thinks all the money you spend on your project cars is a little silly."

    It's all about compromise!


    Oh yes, 100% stupid to me. 

    Not going to lie though, I absolutely love having designated money to decorate our house.  I go in spurts when I spend it, but when I do I usually spend a good chunk of it.  Decorated our new family room last year and it cost me $600.  In our regular budget my H would have shit his pants.  But because I have that sinking fund he asked me how much it cost, I told him, and he just rolled his eyes and said he hopes I get joy out of it.  I sure do buddy. 

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  • I think its all about balance.  I like having excess money to fund certain accounts like the emergency fund, home improvement fund, and retirement.  The only debt we have is my student loan and DH's business has a commercial loan for his studio building.  I know I could seriously get way aggressive with my student loans but then we could never do little house projects or afford retirement and I'm just not willing to compromise on that.

    Just the other day lightening struck and I couldn't get our garage doors opened.  DH finally was able to get mine working but we are still struggling to get his working - He is going to try and fix it this week.  We did call Sears yesterday to have a guy come out and look at it but are going to see if DH can fix it first.  They had mentioned they have a program for a home warranty for $60/month. with that you pay the $60/month and an additional $60 for the tech to come out and fix any appliance or HVAC issue you are having and that's covered.  DH wanted to do it but I'm so dang cheap I said "no way".  I would have never thought there'd be a day where I'm cheaper than he is about $$.
  • vlagrl35 said:
    I think its all about balance.  I like having excess money to fund certain accounts like the emergency fund, home improvement fund, and retirement.  The only debt we have is my student loan and DH's business has a commercial loan for his studio building.  I know I could seriously get way aggressive with my student loans but then we could never do little house projects or afford retirement and I'm just not willing to compromise on that.

    Just the other day lightening struck and I couldn't get our garage doors opened.  DH finally was able to get mine working but we are still struggling to get his working - He is going to try and fix it this week.  We did call Sears yesterday to have a guy come out and look at it but are going to see if DH can fix it first.  They had mentioned they have a program for a home warranty for $60/month. with that you pay the $60/month and an additional $60 for the tech to come out and fix any appliance or HVAC issue you are having and that's covered.  DH wanted to do it but I'm so dang cheap I said "no way".  I would have never thought there'd be a day where I'm cheaper than he is about $$.
    Be very, very careful about those "home warranties"  My brother in law owns an HVAC system and he stopped working on home warranty repairs because the company wouldn't let him fix it the right way.  He could only do bandaid repairs and he had to jump through a lot of hoops.  It was actually starting to damage his company reputation because he wasn't allowed to fix it right because the warranty company didn't want to pay for it.

    Also, there is usually a ton of fine print regarding regular service calls, maintenance and having a lot of paperwork proof that certain things were or were not done.

    Byt the time you pay $60 a month for the warranty for a few years you probably could have just paid for the fix to begin with.
    Formerly AprilH81
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  • AprilZ81 said:
    vlagrl35 said:
    I think its all about balance.  I like having excess money to fund certain accounts like the emergency fund, home improvement fund, and retirement.  The only debt we have is my student loan and DH's business has a commercial loan for his studio building.  I know I could seriously get way aggressive with my student loans but then we could never do little house projects or afford retirement and I'm just not willing to compromise on that.

    Just the other day lightening struck and I couldn't get our garage doors opened.  DH finally was able to get mine working but we are still struggling to get his working - He is going to try and fix it this week.  We did call Sears yesterday to have a guy come out and look at it but are going to see if DH can fix it first.  They had mentioned they have a program for a home warranty for $60/month. with that you pay the $60/month and an additional $60 for the tech to come out and fix any appliance or HVAC issue you are having and that's covered.  DH wanted to do it but I'm so dang cheap I said "no way".  I would have never thought there'd be a day where I'm cheaper than he is about $$.
    Be very, very careful about those "home warranties"  My brother in law owns an HVAC system and he stopped working on home warranty repairs because the company wouldn't let him fix it the right way.  He could only do bandaid repairs and he had to jump through a lot of hoops.  It was actually starting to damage his company reputation because he wasn't allowed to fix it right because the warranty company didn't want to pay for it.

    Also, there is usually a ton of fine print regarding regular service calls, maintenance and having a lot of paperwork proof that certain things were or were not done.

    Byt the time you pay $60 a month for the warranty for a few years you probably could have just paid for the fix to begin with.
    right?  I was thinking that was a LOT of money a year to fork over say even if your home is fine.  that money is not being put to use.
  • Not to mention you can get a home warranty from other companies in the $300-350/year range.  So half the price they quoted.

    And yeah, I had a home warranty on my first house.  The heater for the house was in the 30 year old range, and kept breaking.  The warranty company covered it, but charged a trip charge every time, I think it was like $75 or something like that.  The HVAC guy who kept coming to fix it told me that he had to keep repairing it, and he couldn't replace it under the warranty unless it was absolutely unfixable.  It also took them a few days to come out each time, and this was in the winter (thankfully in CA so not THAT cold, but still cold enough to need a heater).  So, it still saved money since I'm sure the repairs were costing more than the trip charge, but it was a huge pain, and me and my pets were FREEZING.  There was a gas wall heater in the family room so I would use that, and the gas bill was like $400 one month because of it.
  • Agree with the other PPs about home warranties.  I personally have never had one of those policies, but I looked into it and most of what I read about was lengthy waits for service and exorbitant service fees.  In fact, a friend/coworker had one and his stove broke. 

    First visit was for the tech to see "what was wrong".  $75 co-pay and took over a week for someone to come out.  Tech ordered the part and returned 10 days later to replace it.  That was a SECOND $75.  For the same problem.  $150 and 3 weeks before their stove was fixed.

  • AprilZ81 said:
    Be very, very careful about those "home warranties"  My brother in law owns an HVAC system and he stopped working on home warranty repairs because the company wouldn't let him fix it the right way.  He could only do bandaid repairs and he had to jump through a lot of hoops.  It was actually starting to damage his company reputation because he wasn't allowed to fix it right because the warranty company didn't want to pay for it.

    Also, there is usually a ton of fine print regarding regular service calls, maintenance and having a lot of paperwork proof that certain things were or were not done.

    Byt the time you pay $60 a month for the warranty for a few years you probably could have just paid for the fix to begin with.
    I'll second this!  Not only that, but the technician has to come out once to inspect.  Report to the home warranty company, then get approval, then come back out to do the work.  Our AC went out upstairs the year after we moved in.  We were out for almost 3 weeks!  Not only that, but they pick and choose what they'll fix.  For our AC fix, they paid for replacing the part, but not removing and reinstalling the refrigerant.  Later, when our garage door broke, they would cover the garage door opener, but not the door itself.

    Also, $60/month is expensive.  We could have renewed ours for $450/yr.  That's $37/month.  We told them where they could shove it and self insure.

    Just for reference.  If you install it yourself, the opener I just put in costs $244 and it's one of the more expensive ones.  You could have 3 of them for $60/month over a year.
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