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Should my fiancee and I pay off our credit card debt before we purchase a new home? |
My fiancee and I have approximately $30,000 in credit card debt (mostly his). He thinks that we should pay off all that debt and put a smaller down payment down on a home, rather than using all our money for the down payment. I argued that we should not worry TOO much about the credit card debt and take care of it another way, such as re-financing our mortgage in several years and using that cash to pay off the credit card debt (since the interest rate would be much lower). Any suggestions? I'm going to make a guess here.... Yea, he would. . . . . If you already have 20% down, then I'd focus on paying the remainder of your debt to below 1/2 of the credit limits. Don't EVER refinance to pay off your credit card debt or auto loans. That is dumb. Just pay it off and stop using your credit cards. Plus if you do pay off the cards don't close them. That will hurt you. The down is MORE important to get a good FIXED rate now. Do that. I personally would pay off the cards and put down less money if you have the credit to qualify for 100% financing. By paying them down to below 30% of the limits, or paying them off you increase your FICO score in two ways, first you do not owe that much, second you reduce your credit to debt ration, the higher FICO score will save you in interest rates for the term of the loan. STOP thinking about refinancing, or home equity loans that is why so many people are facing foreclosure right now, build up equity in your home, and keep building it in the event of an emergency. I think your fiance is correct. Paying off what you have would put you in a better financial condition for purchasing your home. Paying off your cards, saving for the down payment plus what you need to furnish it would be much wiser choice. Then you'll also possibly have money to stick in savings for when something needs fixing or replacing. By several years down the road, you will probably have paid a small fortune in interest on that much credit card debt. I'd agree that paying down the credit cards would be a good idea. Having that much credit card debt will affect your chances of even getting a mortgage, and if you can, will affect the terms. I think that $30,000 credit card debt is going to hurt you especially now. Mortgages are getting hard to get and there are a lot of foreclosures out there. You may want to talk to a mortgage lender. They don't like big debts and they really like paying jobs plus nice bank accounts. |
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