Reader Story: Debt-Free by 30 — Including the Mortgage!
Published on - July 4th, 2010 (Modified on - July 22nd, 2010) (by J.D. Roth) This guest post from Jesse (who juggles) is part of the “reader stories” feature here at Get Rich Slowly. Some stories contain general “how I did X” advice; others are examples of how a GRS reader achieved financial success — or failure. These stories feature folks from all levels of financial maturity and with all sorts of incomes.
My wife and I paid off our house in April while we were both still 29 years old. We have no other debts (except the occasional library fine). How did we do it? Here are the six key factors.
Living like students
We live on half our income and save the other half. This isn’t exactly 50/50, but that’s the general breakdown of our finances.
We were college and graduate students between 1998 and 2007. We got used to living a student’s standard of living. When our household income doubled in 2008 and increased again 2009, we maintained the same standard of living as if we were still in school and then saved the rest.
Buying a home we can afford
We bought a house for a price that was just under a full year’s income In 2009, our household income was right around $100,000. We probably could have qualified to purchase a home for $200,000 or $250,000. But we were committed to buying a home that we could have paid off either immediately or within a year, so we only looked at houses priced at $120,000 or less, hoping to only pay less than $100,000.
We also found ourselves in the unexpected situation of being interested homebuyers during one of the housing market’s darkest moments in recent history: spring and summer of 2009. We got plenty of attention from a great realtor who was happy to work with our low budget. We also knew that we could get a great deal on a house — and we did.
Most homes in any market under $100,000 are fixer-uppers. I have experience in construction, so I knew that I could repair much of the house myself. We found our winner (a foreclosure that was purchased for $250,000 in 2007) and paid $88,000 for it. Most of the fixing-up needed was cosmetic stuff. The roof, foundation, and structure were found to be in good shape. The federal government sent us a check for $8,000, and we took out a mortgage for $55,000. We paid off that $55,000 in ten months (using some money we kept in the bank at closing, plus our surplus income for those 10 months).
In the year we’ve lived in the house, I’ve done most of the repair work, and we’ve only spent about $5,000 in improvements. We are now to the point where the house is mostly where we want it to be with the exception of the kitchen, which will be the one major overhaul that could cost $25,000 or more. But for now, it’s functional, and we’ll only re-do it as we can afford to pay for it with cash.
Giving to charity
We give just over 10% of our income to charity. I don’t think this is a fixed requirement in order to live a happy life, but it helps us to be free from money so that we’re in charge of it rather than the other way around. This foundation has helped us to be in a position to save and live frugally, thus allowing us to be debt-free, including the house.
Destroying student loans
We both went to a private college as well as graduate school, yet all of our school bills were paid in full by the time we graduated graduate school.
My wife worked a crazy high-paying summer job in college that I signed up for just before we got married (which was as we were starting graduate school). It’s not for everybody, but it worked for us: We sold educational books door-to-door. We netted as much as $22,000 and $23,000 each in a summer, paying for life and school each semester with cash.
That started us on a a debt-free foot when we graduated from school in 2007. This summer job also put us through the heat of running our own business, dealing with lots of rejection, and working hard. These principles helped us to learn that true income comes from hard work and having low expenses.
Living frugally
We save money by cutting back a little in a lot of areas.
We don’t have a television, which saves the cost of buying a new one every few years, as well as the monthly cable bill. Instead, we have affordable internet, and watch movies and a few TV shows on the computer.
We actually went without internet for the two years while we rented and saved for a house up until we paid off the house. I used the internet daily at the local library for free. It was hard sometimes, but the one hour time limit per day saved me time to do lots of other productive things in life.
Here are some other ways we save:
- When we go out to eat, we usually skip on drinks or dessert. We just get water and maybe a cheaper treat from the store on the way home.
- We don’t do Netflix. We might pay to see a movie at a theater once a year. Instead, we get tons of great movies for free from the local public library.
- We have one car (a 2001 Toyota Corolla, which gets anywhere from 25-30 MPG) and two bikes.
- We don’t subscribe to any newspapers or magazines. We keep in touch with information via the internet and through free local papers.
- We shop at yard sales and thrift stores for many items ranging from clothes to furniture.
- We never buy new cell phones. I use a Nokia block phone that basically makes phone calls and sends texts. We have a family plan for both our cell phones that costs only $75 a month. We do not have a land line.
Every day, we enjoy the simple things in life such as walks, picnics, bike rides, community festivals, etc. Most of these activities are free yet priceless.
Paying off the mortgage
We were convinced that paying off a house rapidly was a smart way to allocate surplus income.
Thanks to financial guru Dave Ramsey, we’ve found that the psychological momentum and freedom you gain from paying off the house rapidly is much more valuable than the money you would mathematically save by investing surplus income in a 8%-12% stock market and holding on to a 5% mortgage. I’m glad we went in this order, because there’s something truly freeing about knowing that we are no longer debtors to anyone.
In February, we found out that we’re pregnant with our first child! Now we can welcome this child (due this September) into a paid-for house! My wife will quit her job to stay at home with the baby while I continue to work. This is only possible because we’ve learned how to live on one income and we have no mortgage payment.
Reminder: This is a story from one of your fellow readers. Please be nice. After nearly a decade of blogging, I have a thick skin, but it can be scary to put your story out in public for the first time. Remember that this guest author isn’t a professional writer, and is just learning about money like you are.
This article is about Debt, House and Home, Reader Stories
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Love it! What a great story and lesson.
Yes many people will write this off as impossible because they don’t earn a high income, don’t live in a lower cost area, don’t have a spouse to split costs.
But the fact of the matter is, this isn’t a story about high income, low cost area, marriage, it is a story about choices. This couple made a series of choices (1) higher education that allowed then to earn higher income (2) location that allowed them to buy a lwoer cost house (3) finding someone who shared their financial habits/goals and (4) came up with a plan that worked for them and stuck with it. Hats off to them! Helps me stay focused on paying of our mortgage (we are otherwise debt free).
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@Shane not a dig at Richmond, VA. That’s where the OP lives and where his 88K house is, according to his blog. Tyler K has chosen to live in Santa Cruz, CA instead. That means that Tyler K prefers the bundle of things that comes with Santa Cruz over the bundle of things that comes with Richmond. Those are his preferences. The OP prefers Richmond, VA. He’s not willing to pay extra to live in Santa Cruz. I was just pointing out Tyler K, like many other people, is willing to pay a premium to live in California.
Some people are willing to pay a premium to live in Boston, something I don’t emotionally understand because I don’t much care for Boston, but have done because I had to. So for those years that bundle of things that came with Boston got me to shell out my entire meager income on rent. (And me not liking Boston much is not a dig at Boston… far better people than I love Boston and hate SF… it’s got to be cultural or something.)
I’ve lived all over the country except the Pacific Northwest. Most places have many things to recommend them and a few drawbacks. Like Tyler K and many others, I like California best, Northern California especially. That’s not where I’m currently living because the bundle of things that comes with Northern CA isn’t better than the bundle of things that comes with where I’m living right now (low house prices included). That could change and I may some day be willing to pay extra to live in the bay area.
Re: they bay area: I love the weather. I love the mixed families of all types. I love the textbooks. I love the walkability. I love the restaurants and the local food. I love the mountains. I love the hiking. I love the way many of our closest friends have moved there. I love the acidic soil and the lack of HOA forcing you to have an artificially green lawn. I don’t love the lack of jobs in my field and I don’t love the housing prices. But, if all I cared about was living where everybody else is living, I’d want to live in New York even more, which I don’t. NYC a lovely place and I have friends who dream of spending the rest of their lives there, but it doesn’t have the weather or the mountains.
Money is useless if it doesn’t pay for other things that you care about, location being an important one. And it’s good that we all have different preferences, otherwise California or NYC would drop into the ocean from the weight. Price is the main way that the market sorts supply and demand so that they meet each other. CA being expensive (especially now after the bubble has popped, effects of prop 13 aside) just means the market is working.
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BRAVO…..CONGRATULATIONS…..CONTINUE ON THIS PATH.
I can say the above since I have been doing a lot of the same, and some more in my 25 years since I was 25. I have written about it in on multiple blogs but do not listen to the folks who talk about motor-homes, and downside of frugality, since you will be far and above those folks in a few years (way above the levels right now), and will only feel sorry for people who do not agree with your methods.
I have never given up TV, Internet, Computers, Restaurants, A Big Home, Nice things, Good Travel, Good Luxuries in the last 10 years……WHY. Did not have to, after putting in some tough years of compromises.
A> In my 20′s and 30′s we ate at McD, Wendy and Taco Bells as our eat out places, and our fancy places were all handled by corporate meetings.
B> We also drank water for the last 25 years, contrary to all opinions of why order water. Today it is an ‘in thing’, and people agree with us on ordering water.
C> We always took lunch from home and save $5 per day x 5 days a week x 52 weeks. That is thousands of dollars today after these many years.
D> We still shop at 6-9 stores looking for the best prices of everything we want/need. If things are in clearance we will buy those for the future (if it lasts). Organizing space at home with lots of shelves.
E> We make friends with people who will share their Sams or Costco cards for the $100-$200 items we purchase per year from those stores (for products that are cheaper over there on a UNIT PRICE basis).
F> We stock up on everything from Toothpaste, Shampoo, Detergent, non-perishables etc esp. during sale time frames.
G> We are HUGE shoppers day after Thanksgiving.
SUMMARY> Why? We paid off our $275K home when I was 41, and then bought a $500K home in cash, without selling the first one off. We manage a good size portfolio of stocks/bonds/CDs. We have paid off our kids education for 8 semesters x 2 (for 2 kids) + have the same amount in another 529 plan for expenses.
HOW> Dollar Consciousness, and Sacrifices today for a guaranteed brighter tomorrow…..
Next-Gen> Teaching these rules of the game to my kids is tough, but they are learning through experience.
Keep it up guys, and you will have a lot to talk about, and discuss within your family, and teach your little ones (when you have them, if you don’t today), and take yourself and your next generation to a level of financial success that they can do ANYTHING, ANYTIME, ANYWHERE, since price does not matter.
Kenny
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Great story and congratulations on your baby! My only suggestion: consider a second car for your wife so she is not dependent on a bike, the bus, waiting for a ride, etc. once your child is here. Unless maybe you will use those modes to get to work and she will get the Corolla?
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As I’ve read through the posts, I’ve noticed a number of individuals suggesting or contemplating moving to a location with lower real estate prices. I would have to strongly disagree with this motivation. I understand the drive to be financially independant, debt free, but where does family and friends fit into this equation? I suppose a person could maybe visit with family once a year for the holidays or Skype their friends or even dump them for a fresh set. But really, isn’t life most importantly about family and friends? I enjoy the physical closeness of my family and the texture in a relationship that a lifetime brings. I would rather deal with financial debt than to move away from my life. Please don’t let an upper class couple that paid off a peid-a-tier in a low rent district detract you from you long term goals. Remember family and friends first.
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All I can say is congratulations – you’ve managed things very well, and you’re set for some very interesting times ahead with children!
I’m hoping to be in the same boat (but with elementary-school-aged children) in about two years: DEBT FREE HERE I COME.
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congrats! what a success story
I’m living debt-free, but I certainly don’t have a lovely home to show for it.
My only one point of concern is the gas mileage on your car. Have you ever read tips for increasing your gas mileage by watching how you drive? I own a 2004 Corolla, and I almost always get 30+ mpg. Typically, I get 35, and I often get 40 on road trips. My brother’s got an ’01 Corolla, and he gets good mileage too. So, you might want to either check out your car or alter your driving habits. If you drive with any regularity, that can be a good, painless way to save a bit more cash.
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I think this is a wonderful story of drive, purpose, and logical determination.
Me and my hubby are planning to do the same thing.
I am about to turn 47 and he is about to turn 55. We have been planning this new life of ours for about a year.
We are selling the house in a year or less, hoping to get our $20K downpayment back and pay for the remaining mortgage and closing costs without going into our savings.
We will then rent someone’s basement for about 4 years.
We will then buy a home for about $150K cash. We think we can save $3K or so per month while we rent someone’s basement.
We have been debt free, except the house for 2.5 years. Our gross is about $131K per year, of which most of that is my income.
I realized yesterday that my mortgage balance just dropped below $200K. This was a house purchased for $255K, with $20K down and financing $235K.
I threw $2500 extra at the house for principle for 3 months. I also threw $1K per month at the principle for 6 months straight.
Here we are, 3 years later, and have only paid $35K worth of principle.
We refuse to play that game anymore! I am tired of making rich bankers richer.
Congrats on a great story to the person who wrote this.
Yep, you two are weird. We are right there with ‘ya!
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I will say, for even Richmond, VA $88k for a $200k house is dirt cheap. I don’t know how you did it, but congratulations. I bought a foreclosure for $125 that would normally go for about $160, and I thought I got a good deal! ha
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“We don’t have a television, which saves the cost of buying a new one every few years, as well as the monthly cable bill.”
What? I don’t know which universe this person lives in, but in this one, TVs typically last for a minimum 10 years, often much long, and used ones can be gotten on Craigslist for ~$20.
I’m still happy with my 16 yo Magnavox…
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Shane – you’ve hit on a major part of their success. People in the comments repeatedly asked “Where do you find $100K houses?” The answer is that they didn’t find a $100K house; they found a ~$200K house that happened to be on sale for $88k – and in an area where they are making 3x the median household salary.
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Wow, this is a great story. With such a great start towards life there is no telling where you guys will be 10, 20, 30 years down the road. You sure could teach a lot of young folks a few things or two, actually it seems you could teach us all. Congrats on all your achievements!
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Interesting story. It just goes to show it can be done. I started this journey myself back in 2004 with a ton of debt, and it’s taken about 6 years to get to a high level of financial freedom, and I’m set for complete retirement in 2012. If I was doing it again I reckon I could do it in around 5 years – from debt to retired – especially if I passed on those holidays to Malaysia and Thailand!
A couple of points on the article itself. The average salary here in the UK is £27K. A small flat where I live (in a relatively cheap area) would cost you around 5 times that. You are not going to get a place here for one years salary – or even a couple’s salary.
I thought your mobile bill was high at $75 per month. Mine is around £25 *per year* on pay-as-you-go.
Completely agree with you on paying off the mortgage as a priority. Yes interest rates are only about 5% – but you are paying 5% on a relatively large amount of money. My mortgage is shrinking rapidly, but it currently costs me around £2,000 per year in interest. You’d have to have £20,000 returning 10% just to cover that. And of course being able to live “rent free” is another advantage of having paid off the mortgage. I’ve made paying off the mortgage a priority, and I haven’t regretted that decision for one minute!
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“Wow! You guys must be so disciplined and iron willed. No TV? Wow… I simply can’t live without them. Working on a computer the whole day gives me a stiff neck and back pains so I don’t wanna watch TV on it. Still prefer lounging in the sofa to watch my favorite shows.
I once read an article that says that people are thrifty on some things to buy expensive things they really love. In your case you were that thrifty on food, entertainment and other stuff so that you can own a house this early. Just a thought…
Anyway, good for you be debt free and for your wife to stay at home after delivery. You have good tips but I think living them all out will deprive me of the things I mostly love. I would consider donating to charity as well, good deed=good karma.
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Hello all. I’m a single 37 year old guy living in Chicago, with no marriage in the near future. My current mortgage is $230K ($1,500/mo., 30yr refi at 5.5%) on an 844sf condo. My purchase price was $267K. When I bought pre-construction in 2004, I figured I’d sell in 5 years and get a bigger place that I could grow in to, but of course, the market tanked. Now my condo complex is plagued with foreclosures and short sales. With the stock market continually losing my retirement savings, I’ve thought about doing another refi putting $48K down to get rid of PMI and to have a lower payment ($900/mo.)–but that would lower my savings/retirement to only $10,000–but I feel I’ll be much better off financially in the long run. Or maybe sell at a loss and rent. I have a well-paying job, and I feel I’ll be able to make up my savings in a couple of years. Any advice would be appreciated thanks!
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@Roy (#116): I have no qualifications whatsoever, so take this with an appropriate box of salt…if I were you, I would probably refinance. It’s not like you’re desperate for cash from the sound of it, so why would you sell at a loss? Do you dislike your condo now? Do you think the market will never pick up again? I tend to think that it will, but then again I don’t live in the US.
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