hilhid
New Member
- Messages
- 5
Age:
late 30s
Spouse’s/Partner's age:
late 30s
Annual gross income from employment or profession:
E150,000 [currently paid in sterling £126,000]
Annual gross income spouse:
E94,000
Type of employment:
me private sector
spouse public sector
Expenditure pattern:
we are definitely spenders
Rough estimate of value of home
E1,100,000
Mortgage on home
E938,500 - we just drew down
Mortgage provider:
BOI
Type of mortgage: Tracker, interest only, fixed rate
30 year term with five year fix
Interest rate
3.55%
Other borrowings – car loans/personal loans etc
About GBP10k on interest-free card in UK
Do you pay off your full credit card balance each month?
Yes, when not interest-free
Savings and investments:
UK self-invested personal pension: E316k (£265k) in cheap global equity fund
US 401k/IRA: E35k ($40k) in US value stocks
Fintech shares, currently not liquid but worth ~£60k
Do you have a pension scheme?
I pay min 5% to get 11% match (total 16%). currently much higher personal payment (circa 30%) to keep salary below UK's 100k cap for childcare
Spouse pays into standard post 2013 civil servant scheme. no AVCs
Do you own any investment or other property?
Flat in London worth circa £330k. rent £1500 a month. currently in middle of 5-year btl fix at 1.62%, so currently making good return ~£12k a year post tax on £130k equity
Ages of children:
a two year old in incredibly expensive nursery
Life insurance:
4x from my work and I *think* 2x from spouse's work
What specific question do you have or what issues are of concern to you?
We just bought a home in Ireland. Currently working abroad, but will be moving back next year. The monthly payments obviously suck now, but if we keep working then inflation will slowly do its thing. My sense is that in the long run it makes clear sense for us to max out our pensions, rather than paying down the mortgage. The one big downside is that it means we must both keep working until at least 50/55 when we can access tax-free lump sum and reduce mortgage balance. but we both love our work and have secure jobs, especially spouse. So:
- maxxed AVCs for spouse or mortgage overpayments, or mixture?
- long-term (maybe even 30 year) fix once we're back and my salary is in euros? seems nice to eliminate rate risk while maxing out equities for pension growth (a good economist piece on this at: "How a mortgage transforms your investment portfolio")
- will i need to sell off the US 401k/IRA once we move or can i keep it there if i don't touch it? I am currently investigating whether I will be Irish tax resident, but non-ordinarily resident and not domiciled in Ireland when we move back. (we will stay for only a few years before heading off again). don't expect real legal or financial advice on this, but thoughts and maybe recommendations for firms that might provide
late 30s
Spouse’s/Partner's age:
late 30s
Annual gross income from employment or profession:
E150,000 [currently paid in sterling £126,000]
Annual gross income spouse:
E94,000
Type of employment:
me private sector
spouse public sector
Expenditure pattern:
we are definitely spenders
Rough estimate of value of home
E1,100,000
Mortgage on home
E938,500 - we just drew down
Mortgage provider:
BOI
Type of mortgage: Tracker, interest only, fixed rate
30 year term with five year fix
Interest rate
3.55%
Other borrowings – car loans/personal loans etc
About GBP10k on interest-free card in UK
Do you pay off your full credit card balance each month?
Yes, when not interest-free
Savings and investments:
UK self-invested personal pension: E316k (£265k) in cheap global equity fund
US 401k/IRA: E35k ($40k) in US value stocks
Fintech shares, currently not liquid but worth ~£60k
Do you have a pension scheme?
I pay min 5% to get 11% match (total 16%). currently much higher personal payment (circa 30%) to keep salary below UK's 100k cap for childcare
Spouse pays into standard post 2013 civil servant scheme. no AVCs
Do you own any investment or other property?
Flat in London worth circa £330k. rent £1500 a month. currently in middle of 5-year btl fix at 1.62%, so currently making good return ~£12k a year post tax on £130k equity
Ages of children:
a two year old in incredibly expensive nursery
Life insurance:
4x from my work and I *think* 2x from spouse's work
What specific question do you have or what issues are of concern to you?
We just bought a home in Ireland. Currently working abroad, but will be moving back next year. The monthly payments obviously suck now, but if we keep working then inflation will slowly do its thing. My sense is that in the long run it makes clear sense for us to max out our pensions, rather than paying down the mortgage. The one big downside is that it means we must both keep working until at least 50/55 when we can access tax-free lump sum and reduce mortgage balance. but we both love our work and have secure jobs, especially spouse. So:
- maxxed AVCs for spouse or mortgage overpayments, or mixture?
- long-term (maybe even 30 year) fix once we're back and my salary is in euros? seems nice to eliminate rate risk while maxing out equities for pension growth (a good economist piece on this at: "How a mortgage transforms your investment portfolio")
- will i need to sell off the US 401k/IRA once we move or can i keep it there if i don't touch it? I am currently investigating whether I will be Irish tax resident, but non-ordinarily resident and not domiciled in Ireland when we move back. (we will stay for only a few years before heading off again). don't expect real legal or financial advice on this, but thoughts and maybe recommendations for firms that might provide
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