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Using 401k for home downpayment?

4,847 Views | 22 Replies | Last: 3 yr ago by Hachieaggie10
Harry_Willie
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Would it be financially irresponsible to cash out my 401k to pay for a downpayment on a home?
I am only a couple of years out of school, but I have saved up enough in my 401k to use for a downpayment on a house.
All of my 401k contributions were post-tax and I did not put into it with the intent of using it as a downpayment. I have been looking into a house and do not know many other ways to get a downpayment aside from saving for years. I do not know if the equity I would gain in purchasing a home (assuming 3 more years of saving) would outweigh the 2 years' worth of contributions in my 401k.
Red Pear Realty
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I worked for about 11 years in corporate America before venturing off on my own. About 7 years in, I cashed out my Roth IRA and bought two homes for rentals, and it was the best decision I could have made. Some good for thought:

- You can get a loan with as low as 3 or 5 percent down if it's your primary residence.

- You should buy a home where other people your age want to live. Line up roommates, and have them pay your mortgage for you. If you play your cards right, you should have a monthly housing expense of $0.

- Take the money you would have spent on rent, and save it for your next deal. Rinse, repeat.

- This might make some folks mad, but the 401k is a scam and always was.

- In a few years you will look up and you will be financially free. Keep working, don't, give generously, do what you want.

My contact information is in my profile if you'd like to discuss further.
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htxag09
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I think the difference in your scenario and the OP is you used your 401K withdrawal to create cash flow and wealth. OP is talking about using his 401K to buy a personal residence. Yes, it could and probably will create equity with the increase in real estate, but still talking about two different things.

Personally, I wouldn't do it. Hard for me to say a 401K is a scam when we look at what's in it at 35 and already see a path to retirement.

I think the best thing most people can do is fund their retirement at a high rate and early, creating compounding interest.

I understand there are lots of ways to retirement and it's not one size fit all. I think many people can cash out their 401K and go different routes and do very well for themselves. I've also seen people cash out their 401Ks making huge mistakes and constantly regretting it. Based on the very, very limited information we have, doesn't seem the OP has the bigger long term view and is just wanting to purchase a house now.
Kenneth_2003
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With the compounding that OP has available to him between now and retirement those 401k dollars are by far and away the most valuable dollars he'll ever have. Average market history says each of those early investment dollars (40 year horizon) can compound to over $60 by the time he reaches retirement.

Combine with the fact that the market is still down, and there's a good chance he would be selling at 1-2 year lows...

My answer would be absolutely do NOT use the 401k dollars to buy a house.
SteveBott
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Most, but not all, allow the owner of the account to loan themselves a down payment and created as a loan of your own money. So the repayment is back to you. I would check with the plan to see what options you have.
Fireman
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Many times you can borrow up to half the value of your 401-K with no tax consequences of withdrawing it. That's a great way to establish a down payment. Some mortgage companies snoop around a bit into your finances because they don't like you borrowing money for your down payment, so you might pull it out early 3 or 4 months before you are ready to buy, so it does not show-up on on recent bank statements.
jja79
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401K loans aren't part of the mortgage equation for lenders.
Harry_Willie
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Thank y'all for the advice. It looks like the best thing to do is keep my money in my 401k and save up slowly but surely. It will make the first day of homeownership even better.
Aggiemike96
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I regret how much I contributed to my 401k earlier in my career. I didn't know any better, so I maxed out my contributions. That money is locked and pretty much out of my control. I do the minimum now and put the rest into real estate. I have four houses, and three are income producing. I'm 90% certain that the income properties will determine when I retire, not my 401k. YMMV.

Of course, I may sing a different tune in a decade or two.
warrington74
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No
tamc91
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I agree with Kenneth, especially the point about the not to sell funds in 401(k) at the current lows. The math may be different if the market was still at record highs, and you weren't selling at a loss. If you've been buying equities with post tax dollars and sell now, you may not recoup those losses in real estate for a long time. That isn't even taking the current mortgage interest rates that may impact your ability to invest for a while.

Maybe seek out another means of saving that money outside of retirement accounts to balance your savings.
JSKolache
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Talk to some mortgage brokers in your area (and on this page) and see what is available in the lending market for your exact scenario. 20% down is antiquated. I mean its still a good rule of thumb, but there are many other options available these days.

And if your 401k is post-tax, then consider bumping it down and maxing out a personal roth IRA in tandem. Its more flexible and you can pull out principal $$ easier.
zagman
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JSKolache said:

Talk to some mortgage brokers in your area (and on this page) and see what is available in the lending market for your exact scenario. 20% down is antiquated. I mean its still a good rule of thumb, but there are many other options available these days.

And if your 401k is post-tax, then consider bumping it down and maxing out a personal roth IRA in tandem. Its more flexible and you can pull out principal $$ easier.


What?

Antiquated? Finance doesn't change because you go into a ridiculous bull market and lenders start offering programs they wouldn't in a bear market to compete against each other. They aren't magicians. And there's still no such thing as a free lunch.

20% down means more equity in your home, easier qualification standards, no PMI, less debt to pay back, less interest to pay, and better insulation from drop in values when compared to any less.
12thAngryMan
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I was previously of the mind that 20% down was the "best" way to go but recently learned if you have a top tier credit score, PMI is very cheap. If you invest the difference in down payment, you could pretty easily come out ahead by not putting 20% down. Obviously a lot of variables come into play, but something for OP to consider.
Jay@AgsReward.com
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There is a misconception that conventional loans require 20% down, and this NOT the case. Sure, it would be better if everyone could put down 20% but that is not always the reality.
Buck Compton
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12thAngryMan said:

I was previously of the mind that 20% down was the "best" way to go but recently learned if you have a top tier credit score, PMI is very cheap. If you invest the difference in down payment, you could pretty easily come out ahead by not putting 20% down. Obviously a lot of variables come into play, but something for OP to consider.
This was only true in ultra-low rate environment in the longest bull market we've ever seen. Extra down payment is an extra 7+% saved at current rates… risk-free! Tell me where else you can find a similar risk-adjusted return. Sure you COULD make more by investing it, but if you tried that a year ago, you'd be down big vs. up 4.5%
bones75
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Aggiemike96 said:

I regret how much I contributed to my 401k earlier in my career. I didn't know any better, so I maxed out my contributions. That money is locked and pretty much out of my control. I do the minimum now and put the rest into real estate. I have four houses, and three are income producing. I'm 90% certain that the income properties will determine when I retire, not my 401k. YMMV.

Of course, I may sing a different tune in a decade or two.
Aggiemike96-

Why not buy income producing RE within your 401K? One of the best decisions I have ever made.
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ChoppinDs40
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I think everyone is missing the point of OP's post here... and assuming he's going to get into real estate investing.

It appears his question is more "B&I" board related than real estate. We don't know if he has a family, is getting married, etc. so "having roommates pay down your mortgage" is kind of a silly suggestion.

With the variables he's presented, I would suggest 2 things:

  • OP - if you're really wanting a house now, and your only source of capital is your 401k, I would not "cash it out". Instead, take a 401k loan for the amount of down payment you need. You will not lose principal balance and simply "pay yourself back" on the loan. Yes, there is interest, but, as some others have said, if you have decent credit, you can get into a CONVENTIONAL loan for 3% down. $500k house? only need $15k+ closing costs. A $15k loan isn't going to cost you a lot in interest.
  • If you're more risk adverse, then just save. That being said, I have no idea what your free cash flow looks like (will $15k take you 3-5 years to save?) You could also divert your 401k contributions (down to the free money from your company match) and pump that into savings until you have enough for the down payment.

Timing this market for a SFH is going to be wild for the next couple years depending on where you are... will rates drop or continue to rise? When will we see prices begin to plummet due to rates? Inventory levels have risen significantly. Houses are sitting and prices are dropping. Now.. has the price equilibrium occurred where the same mortgage on that house 9-12 months ago = today with ^ interest rates and v home value? I don't think so.

Lots of things to consider but a SFH that you plan to occupy isn't always the best investment... especially in this market of expensive debt and high home prices.

What would I do? I'd probably buckle down and get some cash saved up (if not for a house, some other impending economic doom). Ride this thing out and see where you're at in life in 12 months.
12thAngryMan
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Fair point, the dynamics have definitely changed in the 6-12 months. But I don't know that it takes historically low rates and a huge bull market for the math to work out assuming a long enough holding period.

@Red Pear: why is a 401k plan a scam?
rondis23
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I'm honestly curious as well. I'd think 401k in a volatile market is the last place you'd want your money in. What if the OP can find a deal on a house and the amount he has in his 401k is not a lot? He sounds fairly young with decades of retirement investing possibly left.
htxag09
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rondis23 said:

I'm honestly curious as well. I'd think 401k in a volatile market is the last place you'd want your money in. What if the OP can find a deal on a house and the amount he has in his 401k is not a lot? He sounds fairly young with decades of retirement investing possibly left.
Again, everyone is different. Everyone has different strategies, goals, risk levels, etc.

But a 401K isn't the last place I'd want my money in a volatile market. 401K investments are generally going to be more stable, not going to lose 50+% of it as if you're betting on stocks. I also have recently seen these losses. So why would I take my money out and risk not seeing the gains back? I mean they are just likely, probably more likely, to increase back to their previous level than homes continue to rise at their rate, if looking at longer historical patterns.

And to counter your point of he's young with decades of retirement investing left.....he's also young with decades of that money to compound via interest....

Real estate is a true and valuable wealth building and investment tool. But if used correctly. In my opinion, that isn't cashing out everything you have to buy a house sooner and one that's probably more expensive than you can afford. Sure, that house should increase in value, increasing your investment. But you also have to factor in high interest rates, upkeep, property taxes, etc.

Again, this is all my opinion. I'm close with people who've done the opposite, instead of funding a 401K they fund real estate. And they're set up extremely well. But I feel like we're confusing real estate investments and a personal house. Which are entirely different, imo.
rondis23
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Great answer! Was just curious. Nice to hear that not all hope is lost in regards to 401k's. I was just thinking more short term and if it wasn't too much money saved up, OP could pull some of his savings out and continue the 401k until markets improve, while also investing in a personal home.
Hachieaggie10
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I used some of my 401k to buy my first house. It worked well for me. I did an FHA with just the 3.5% down.

Knowing what I know now, I work in real estate and mortgage, I would do a 5% down conventional. You can do a 3% down but your Mortgage Insurance will be cheap at 5% down. (Likely less than $75.00 a month depending on overall profile) I would minimize what you take out to buy the house or do it as a loan so that you can pay yourself back. 401K loans are not counted in your DTI ratios so it won't hurt you.
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