New Jersey Mortgage Calculator: Pay off loan or invest?
ποΈ New Jersey Tax Considerations
New Jersey's high state income tax rate of 10.75% significantly impacts your mortgage vs. investment decision. The valuable mortgage interest deduction becomes more beneficial in high-tax states, potentially favoring keeping your mortgage longer.
π‘ Key Tax Highlights:
- High 10.75% state tax rate increases mortgage deduction value
- Combined federal + state deduction can exceed 35% for high earners
- Investment gains subject to both federal and 10.75% state capital gains tax
π― Planning Considerations:
- High tax rates make mortgage interest deduction especially valuable
- Consider timing of investment gains to manage tax burden
- Estate planning implications may differ due to high state taxes
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Scenarios
Interest Savings:
$0
Money saved on interest payments
Time Saved:
0 months
Loan paid off earlier
Tax Deduction Lost:
$0
Tax benefits you give up
Net After-Tax Benefit:
$0
The real bottom line
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| Month | Principal | Interest | Tax Savings | Total Payment | Balance | After-Tax Reality Check | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Instead | After | Should I Invest? | True Benefit | ||||||
| (Pre-Tax) | (Pre-Tax) | (After-Tax @ 15%) | (Lifetime PV) | ||||||
π How to read the After-Tax Analysis
Understanding the columns:
- Tax Savings: Monthly tax deduction from mortgage interest (if you itemize)
- Should I Invest? (After-Tax @ 15%): What your investments would be worth after paying 15% capital gains tax on gains only (tax impact starts small and grows as gains accumulate)
- True Benefit (Lifetime PV): The present value of lifetime benefit from each additional payment, comparing:
- β Present value of interest saved over remaining loan term
- β Tax deductions lost over remaining loan term
- β Opportunity cost of not investing that payment instead
π True Benefit Formula:
For each additional payment (Present Value over remaining loan term):
PV Debt Benefit = Present value of interest saved minus tax deductions lost
Investment Opportunity Cost = Future value of investment after capital gains tax minus principal
True Benefit = PV Debt Benefit - Investment Opportunity Cost
This shows the lifetime present value impact of each payment, not just monthly differences
Example with $100 payment in month 1 (359 months remaining):
- Monthly interest saved: $100 Γ 5.125% Γ· 12 = $0.43/month
- After-tax monthly benefit: $0.43 - ($0.43 Γ 24%) = $0.33/month
- PV of 359 payments: ~$87 (discounted at after-tax loan rate)
- Investment future value: $100 Γ (1.00583)^359 = ~$850
- Investment gains: $850 - $100 = $750
- Capital gains tax: $750 Γ 15% = $112.50
- After-tax investment value: $850 - $112.50 = ~$737
- Net investment benefit: $737 - $100 = $637
- True Benefit = $87 - $637 = -$550 (investing wins big!)
Key insights:
π΄ Negative "True Benefit"
You're better off investing the extra money instead of paying off the loan early
You're better off investing the extra money instead of paying off the loan early
π’ Positive "True Benefit"
Paying off the loan early is better than investing (after all taxes)
Paying off the loan early is better than investing (after all taxes)
π Higher tax bracket = More valuable mortgage deduction
The higher your tax rate, the more valuable your mortgage interest deduction becomes
The higher your tax rate, the more valuable your mortgage interest deduction becomes
π Standard deduction vs Itemizing
If you don't itemize, you get no mortgage interest deduction benefit
If you don't itemize, you get no mortgage interest deduction benefit