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Ask Dr. Don
By
Don
Taylor,
Ph.D.,
CFA
Bankrate.com |
Refinancing for debt consolidation
Dear Dr. Don,
We have a $57,000 mortgage on a three-year
ARM that we need to refinance one way or another. This will not
be our final home.
We are in our late 40s with an upcoming college student
in five years and retirement looming on the horizon. We have $28,000
in truck and boat loans, which are not tax-deductible.
We plan to stay in our home for five years. Our home
is valued at $125,000. We are becoming concerned about taxes hitting
us more and more. What is the best plan of action for us? Thanks
for your help. I enjoy your columns.
Heather Homeloan
Dear Heather,
Using a cash-out refinancing to pay off the truck and boat
loans along with refinancing the adjustable-rate mortgage should
be a slam-dunk. As long as you can use the mortgage interest deduction
on your taxes, you'll gain the interest deduction from that part
of the mortgage loan that you took out to pay off the car and the
boat loans.
The stickier issue is whether it makes sense for you
to borrow money now to invest for your child's education. The simple
answer is no, don't do it. Even though borrowing against your house
is likely to be your least-expensive source of borrowed funds, you're
still only making the difference between the after-tax return on
your investments vs. the after-tax cost of debt.
Even if you deposit money from the loan in a Section
529 College Savings Plan, making the investment returns tax-free
when used to pay for qualified college expenses, you're still counting
on the spread between the investment returns and the after-tax cost
of debt being positive. While that's likely, I don't think that's
your best approach to financing college this close to your child's
planned enrollment.
You expect to sell your home around the same time
that your child starts college. The capital gains provisions on
home sales are much more liberal than they used to be. Under current
tax law, it's unlikely that you would owe capital gains taxes on
the sale of this home. See IRS
Publication 523, Selling Your Home for tax implications.
You could count on using part of the profits from
the home sale to help finance your child's education. If you don't
sell the house, the equity will still be there to tap, and you've
avoided paying interest on that amount over the five-year period.
-- Posted: Dec. 31, 2001
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