Jun-03-2015 06:50 AM
Jun-05-2015 11:27 AM
Jun-05-2015 05:29 AM
smkettner wrote:RoyBell wrote:Property tax including Mello-roos school bonds and street improvement bonds 1.5%. $300k is a good down payment.
I'd be curious what the "cash only" folks pay in property and other taxes. Being in IL we have some of the highest property taxes (2-3% value of home on average, average home 200-300K), state income tax (2.5%), and sales tax (8.5%), higher in the city. Plus the tax for toll roads ( $1-2 per toll now I think), high gas prices (currently $3.15 for regular)... The list goes on and on. They suck us dry here.
At the end of the day, the government gets more of my money than most other states. I suppose if I got to keep that money I could buy more in cash too 😉
Income tax up to 9%
Sales tax 8%+
Gas $4 but not too many toll roads
Electricity 15 to 46 cents per kWh
CA has you beat by a long shot.
Jun-05-2015 04:21 AM
rbpru wrote:Thank-you for saving your money so it's available for me to borrow cheaply - you rock!.
Hopefully no one will have to discover the advantages of "pay as you go".
Mainly because it often involves a series on unpleasant circumstances, that no one thinks will happen to them.
It is true that somethings must be financed, but I never considered toys to be one of them. I prefer to set a savings goal and wait.
I am sure I am in the minority.
Jun-04-2015 09:44 PM
RoyBell wrote:Property tax including Mello-roos school bonds and street improvement bonds 1.5%. $300k is a good down payment.
I'd be curious what the "cash only" folks pay in property and other taxes. Being in IL we have some of the highest property taxes (2-3% value of home on average, average home 200-300K), state income tax (2.5%), and sales tax (8.5%), higher in the city. Plus the tax for toll roads ( $1-2 per toll now I think), high gas prices (currently $3.15 for regular)... The list goes on and on. They suck us dry here.
At the end of the day, the government gets more of my money than most other states. I suppose if I got to keep that money I could buy more in cash too 😉
Jun-04-2015 07:27 PM
Jun-04-2015 07:10 PM
Jun-04-2015 06:53 PM
Jun-04-2015 03:39 PM
tragusa3 wrote:
I haven't had a credit card in almost 20 years (unless my debit card counts)...credit score was 820 when they pulled it for our trailer this year. I'm not sure of the complete formula, but closing or not using credit hasn't affected mine.
Jun-04-2015 03:19 PM
Jun-04-2015 01:40 PM
RoyBell wrote:
I have been told having too much available credit is just as bad as no open credit. Face of the matter is no one knows for sure what makes it go up or down. In my experience, just the act of closing cards has not adversely affected my credit...however, I usually have a new line of credit not too far behind it.
The question was if closing cards effects credit. The answer is no, but possible indirectly. If you have enough open credit you should be fine. I'm am proof. Show me someone who has closed all their credits and their credit dropped to 500. Sounds like an old wives tale to me.
Jun-04-2015 12:45 PM
RoyBell wrote:
I have been told having too much available credit is just as bad as no open credit. Face of the matter is no one knows for sure what makes it go up or down. In my experience, just the act of closing cards has not adversely affected my credit...however, I usually have a new line of credit not too far behind it.
The question was if closing cards effects credit. The answer is no, but possible indirectly. If you have enough open credit you should be fine. I'm am proof. Show me someone who has closed all their credits and their credit dropped to 500. Sounds like an old wives tale to me.
Jun-04-2015 11:55 AM
Jun-04-2015 11:53 AM
Vulcan Rider wrote:RoyBell wrote:
It's BS.
Well you claim to know pretty much everything already so I continue to wonder why you asked for advice in the first place.
Except you don't know what you don't know.
It's not BS.
A huge part of your credit score is:
How much total "revolving" credit you have and what percentage of that remains unused. Closing a card or cards reduces your available credit and hurts your score....eventually. All of this stuff takes time to sift down through all of the filters.
Jun-04-2015 11:37 AM
coolbreeze01 wrote:RoyBell wrote:
(I did close some cards yesterday, maybe it helped?). So close.
I don't know anything about credit, but I've heard closing credit cards can have a negative effect on scores.
Anybody know?