My income was cut in half. Do I sell my $600K home and kiss my 2.9% mortgage rate goodbye?

My income was cut in half. Do I sell my $600K home and kiss my 2.9% mortgage rate goodbye?

My income was cut in half. Do I sell my $600K home and kiss my 2.9% mortgage rate goodbye?

“Selling our home was in our five-year plan, but it could happen as early as June, after my son graduates.” (Photo subject is a model.)
“Selling our home was in our five-year plan, but it could happen as early as June, after my son graduates.” (Photo subject is a model.) – Getty Images/iStockphoto

I’m in a financial mess and I need advice. We are very overextended due to my income being cut nearly in half. I have been trying to manage while I look for another job, but our credit has taken a significant hit. We have a lot of equity in our home — we owe $330,000 on a property valued at $600,000.

I have looked at home-equity investments, home-equity lines of credit, second mortgages, etc., all of which we don’t qualify for for one reason or another. Our current mortgage rate is 2.9%. It is looking like a cash-out refinance may be our only option. That’s a last resort, because I don’t want to lose our current interest rate.

We have one car, which is significantly upside-down. Selling our home was in our five-year plan, but it could happen as early as June, after my son graduates. This school district is pretty expensive, but we can move 10 miles south, where property is much cheaper and where we can more than afford our mortgage, insurance, utilities and food.

Is there an option I haven’t thought of yet?

Family in Need

Related: My girlfriend, a widow in her 40s, pays off her credit card after every transaction. Is that weird?

You can’t keep downsizing, and you would be signing up for another 30-year mortgage at a higher rate. 
You can’t keep downsizing, and you would be signing up for another 30-year mortgage at a higher rate. – MarketWatch illustration

It may be that you can do both: Get another job that pays you what you need and also downsize.

Let’s say you have a 2.9% rate on a $500,000 mortgage. Your monthly payment would be around $2,000 over 30 years, not including homeowners insurance, mortgage insurance and property taxes. If you purchased a home in a cheaper area for, say, $400,000 at a 6.2% rate and put $100,000 down, you would have $200,000 left over from the sale of your home, but you would also have monthly payments of $1,830 per month. Brace for closing costs of between 2% and 5% ($8,000 to $20,000).

There are two big caveats, in addition to a mortgage payment that would be almost unchanged: You can’t keep downsizing, so this may be your one chance to do so. You don’t say how many years you have left on your current mortgage, but you would be signing up for a 30-year mortgage at a higher rate. (For a 15-year loan at 5.7%, you would pay around $2,490 a month.) Also, you should think carefully about whether you will be happy in your new neighborhood and home.

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