Not really. If your employment is less secure, it would be better to have the flexibility of access to your money.captainspoke wrote: ↑Wed Sep 28, 2022 12:26 pmFor some, the arc of their working life is secure and predictable, and a long (large?) mortgage would seem more like a no-brainer.RetireJapan wrote: ↑Wed Sep 28, 2022 12:17 pm...
I understand that some people don't like being in debt and it makes them feel better to pay off the mortgage early (and this is a good reason to do so) but I don't see any other argument for doing that.
For those whose employment outlook is less secure, the feel better aspect might be more important.
Does that sound right?
You could continue to make your mortgage payments, for example (if you repay your mortgage early and then run into financial difficulties, the bank will not give you credit for those early payments and will expect you to continue making the regular ones).
If your investments have grown you will have more reserves to tide you over.
A very low cost loan is an amazing thing, and by paying it off early one is losing access to it.
I would borrow infinite money at 0.5%, but the bank will only lend it to me against a home. So voluntarily reducing the amount they will lend you doesn't make sense to me, unless not doing so would make you unhappy or stressed (in which case paying off the loan is the correct thing to do for you).