Houston Chronicle

It’s painful to reduce savings to pay off debt, but essential

- Universal Uclick

Q: I am often astounded and frustrated by the wealth that others have.

My husband and I are both 61. Our combined income is $58,000. Our $225,000 house is paid for. Our children have been educated. They live successful­ly and independen­tly. We have $325,000 in an annuity and $120,000 in other investment­s. He will receive Social Security; I will have a public pension. I plan to work as long as they will have me

We paid for major repairs to our home several years ago through a home equity loan. We still owe $10,000 on that, and have (gulp) $33,000 in credit card debt. I have reduced interest rates to the lowest amount and work on paying off the highest-interest-rate card first. I also pay above the minimum on the others. Our credit rating is good. We live frugally. I cut everywhere I can. He has a new car. Mine will need to be replaced within two years. One of my sons got in a financial bind when his salary unexpected­ly dropped. He was paying extremely high interest rates. So we loaned him money through our line of credit. He pays his portion of the loan by direct deposit from his paychecks, plus he has extra deposited as a savings for himself (my prerequisi­te for the loan to him). I know you’ll tell me we shouldn’t have done that, and used that line of credit to pay down our own debt. But it was getting extremely stressful for him. My husband wants me to withdraw savings to pay off our debt, which makes sense. But I fear we won’t be able to rebuild our savings before I retire. I feel better knowing it’s there. I believe we’ll be able to pay off our debt in three to four years. Your suggestion? — N.S., by email

A: First, I hope you and your husband appreciate what you have achieved. Although your income is right in the middle, your savings and home equity put you in the top 25 percent for people in their 60s. While you may regularly see much larger figures in this column, you’ve been more successful at saving than most people.

Rather than secondgues­s what’s already done — borrowing to lend to your son — let’s deal with the mechanics of improving your situation. Keeping the debt on credit cards is the least efficient option you have. The interest rate you pay will be higher and the interest isn’t taxdeducti­ble.

If the line of credit can be enlarged, borrow more and pay off the credit cards. Then pick a time period in which you think you can pay off the new debt. The other alternativ­e is to take the money from savings and ‘pay yourself back’ from the monthly payments to the credit cards that you will no longer be making.

I know it’s painful to reduce savings to pay off debt, but the reality is that you don’t really have that money. When the debt is paid off from savings, your net worth will be identical to what it is now.

 ??  ?? SCOTT BURNS
SCOTT BURNS

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