CookieAdventure

CookieAdventure t1_j6lljsn wrote

At first I thought your idea was odd then I realized that is how we’ve always moved houses because … well, we always moved states. We had to rent while looking for a new house to buy. It never took us a year, though. We hate renting. 7 months in a crappy apartment was stressful enough for us.

The only time we didn’t rent was buying the house we are in currently. We planned on a smooth transition but the buyers’ attorney for the house we were selling was awful. He delayed the closing for over 2 months. Luckily we didn’t have a mortgage so carrying two houses wasn’t an issue. When he threatened yet another delay in the closing we told him we were going to refuse the extension because our house had gone up in value (about $30k). They panicked and we closed within a few days. I have no idea what he was thinking. He then had the gall to chastise us for forcing him to do a remote close. We had already moved hundreds of miles away! Had he closed on time, we would have been there in person.

Anyway, that was the worst closing I’ve ever had. Usually it is nothing more complicated than loading up the truck and handing the keys over after signing some papers. I’ve even been driving away as the new owners were pulling up with their truck.

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CookieAdventure t1_j6j2q6u wrote

Not really. Your vehicle isn’t “new”.

Your vehicle has comprehensive on it. That part of your insurance policy pays to repair your vehicle if it is damaged. You need that even if it is in storage. If a tornado goes through while you’re deployed, the vehicle is covered (more or less).

Then there is liability coverage. That is the part of the policy that covers you and damage you cause. Talk to your insurance agent for more details.

The gap insurance is an add-on to your policy that helps you to pay off your loan if the vehicle is totaled. Soon you won’t need to keep that.

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CookieAdventure t1_j6j069r wrote

Auto insurance covers you as a driver … any car you drive is insured if you cause damage while insured and auto insurance covers damage to your car.

You don’t need to do anything except let your insurance agent know that the vehicle is in storage. If the car is going to be in storage (garaged) in another state, they need to know, too. Vehicle insurance doesn’t usually move states.

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CookieAdventure t1_j6iwqm2 wrote

I don’t know which deployment port you’ll be in, but all sorts of things can happen while it is in storage, especially if you’re on the gulf or east coast. Your insurance should drop because you won’t be driving it but it still needs to be covered for damage. Ask a mechanic what you have to do to store it properly if you can’t leave it with someone who can drive it occasionally.

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CookieAdventure t1_j6iuysp wrote

You won’t need a vehicle when you’re on a sub but you won’t be at sea for the entire 2 years. You do get a break. You can store the vehicle. Yes, it was a stupid purchase but, if you can’t afford to sell it now, your option is to store it and pay down the loan. The upside is once you get access to it again, it’ll be really low mileage for its age.

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CookieAdventure t1_j2avql2 wrote

I’m wondering … have you calculated how much it costs you to work? How much does your employment contribute to the taxes you pay? If you didn’t work, would you still be in need of childcare? (I ask because, with your spouse working from home, you might have to have a quieter environment than 3 young kids will provide, especially in a small house). BTW, childcare doesn’t completely disappear once kids are in school. There are lots of days when kids aren’t in school and those breaks and summer can be very expensive.

I ask these questions because, if I were in your situation, I’d lean toward working less, not more. I wouldn’t take the OT given the bonus package. I’d lean toward straight salary plus profit sharing. That way, if you work less than 40-hours but get your job done, it doesn’t matter to your cash flow. You can take your reduced stress level and put that toward household money management and quality of life issues.

As for the house, keep in mind I’ve raised 5 kids to adulthood, your 3 bd, 1.5 ba, 1700 sq ft is fine until the kids are around age 12. Before then, I’d predict you might move to a more suitable house rather than remodel.

So, priorities:

  • Emergency fund. Aim for 6 months of regular monthly expenses (including daycare).

  • Debt pay-off except the mortgage. Reduce unnecessary expenses.

  • Save for another used vehicle.

  • Fund retirement.

  • Aim to have one stay-at-home parent by the time the oldest child is 12. At that point, childcare ends and the middle school / teenagers truly need their parents around. If you can only choose one time in childhood when you don’t work, the time between 12 and 18 is the most critical.

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