For decades, Americans have treated their homes like both a dream and an investment strategy. But when it comes to retirement planning, your house has a very specific role to play — and it’s probably not what social media tells you.
This week, Pete, Kristen, and Dame tackle one of the most misunderstood retirement concepts in personal finance: why entering retirement without a mortgage can dramatically improve financial flexibility, lower stress, and reduce the amount of money you actually need to retire.
But there’s an important distinction here: this is not an episode about draining your retirement accounts to aggressively pay off your mortgage tomorrow. In fact, that can sometimes make your situation worse.
The crew explores:
Why cash flow matters more than net worth in retirement
The psychological power of owning your home outright
Why a paid-off house lowers retirement pressure
When keeping a mortgage into retirement can still make sense
Why “I could pay it off” is very different from “I should pay it off”
The hidden danger of becoming “house rich and cash poor”
How today’s low-rate mortgages complicate the conversation
Plus: Pete explains why many people misunderstand what financial advisors mean when they say your home is part of your retirement strategy.
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