Curious on this board's thoughts on payback period for a personal capital expenditure.
I've had a wood shake roof on my house since we purchased it. It's always been difficult and expensive to insure. We've only had one carrier that would insure it, and it's close to double the cost of a similar house with a regular roof. It also locks our cars to the same carrier because of bundling, and our auto is more than it could be elsewhere. We've held out, hoping for a hailstorm, but no luck.
Our policies skyrocketed this year, like everyone else's. If we replaced the roof, we'd save over $4k per year. With that kind of savings, the roof will pay for itself in a little over 5 years**. I went ahead and bit the bullet and put a new one on and I'm glad I did. But I couldn't find good, consistent information on what's considered a "good" payback period for personal assets, so I'm curious what others would consider the right level. I think a near 20% return is worth it, not to mention a lot more flexibility.
** - I also calculated if the initial amount was invested vs investing the annual savings, and the payback period is closer to 8 years with an 8% return. Still good with that, personally.
I've had a wood shake roof on my house since we purchased it. It's always been difficult and expensive to insure. We've only had one carrier that would insure it, and it's close to double the cost of a similar house with a regular roof. It also locks our cars to the same carrier because of bundling, and our auto is more than it could be elsewhere. We've held out, hoping for a hailstorm, but no luck.
Our policies skyrocketed this year, like everyone else's. If we replaced the roof, we'd save over $4k per year. With that kind of savings, the roof will pay for itself in a little over 5 years**. I went ahead and bit the bullet and put a new one on and I'm glad I did. But I couldn't find good, consistent information on what's considered a "good" payback period for personal assets, so I'm curious what others would consider the right level. I think a near 20% return is worth it, not to mention a lot more flexibility.
** - I also calculated if the initial amount was invested vs investing the annual savings, and the payback period is closer to 8 years with an 8% return. Still good with that, personally.