In my experience, a dividend growth portfolio strategy seems to be performing better as an investment than owning a home, in my honest opinion, I would rather rent in a great area than own a home in that area, jeez if I were able to get a lease agreement for 10 years indexed at inflation or at 2.5 % increase annually I would take it and take my down payment and invest it in my portfolio, and continue to contribute the max in my 401K, HSA, and Roth IRA, while enjoying living in a low tax bracket because of my contribution
In my experience, a dividend growth portfolio strategy seems to be performing better as an investment than owning a
home,
in my honest opinion, I would rather rent in a great area than own a home in that area, jeez if I were able to get a lease agreement for 10 years indexed at inflation or at 2.5 % increase annually I would take it and take my down payment and invest it in my portfolio, and continue to contribute the max in my 401K, HSA, and Roth IRA, while enjoying living in a low tax bracket because of my contribution
in my honest opinion, I would
rather rent
in a great area than own a home in that area, jeez if I were able to get a lease agreement for 10 years indexed at inflation or at 2.5 % increase annually I would take it and take my down payment and invest it in my portfolio, and continue to contribute the max in my 401K, HSA, and Roth IRA, while enjoying living in a low tax bracket because of my contribution
in a great area than own a
home in that area, jeez if I were able to get a lease agreement for 10 years indexed at inflation or at 2.5 % increase annually I would take it and take my down payment and invest it in my portfolio, and continue to contribute the max in my 401K, HSA, and Roth IRA, while enjoying living in a low tax bracket because of my contribution
in that area, jeez if I were able to get a lease agreement for 10 years indexed at inflation or at 2.5 % increase annually I would take it and take my down payment and
invest it
in my portfolio, and continue to contribute the max in my 401K, HSA, and Roth IRA, while enjoying living in a low tax bracket because of my contribution
in my portfolio, and continue to contribute the max
in my 401K, HSA, and Roth IRA, while enjoying living in a low tax bracket because of my contribution
in my 401K, HSA, and Roth IRA, while enjoying living
in a low tax bracket because of my contribution
in a low tax bracket because of my contributions.
If you're far enough along on your
home loan such that your mortgage - interest tax deduction isn't worth much, and you plan to
invest the money through a tax - qualified account such as a Roth IRA
rather than a taxable account, that may skew the numbers
in favor of
investing over paying down the mortgage — assuming you're fairly certain about your market returns.