Hello, Friend got a new truck. Price of truck OTD = $45k Down payment at time of finance = $2k ($43k financed) Interest = 6.9% Total for 75 months = $55.5k roughly which means it’s about $10k of ONLY interest. Payment = $710/month

Correct me if I’m wrong but in theory this truck can be paid off tomorrow and my friend pays none of the $10k interest, right? Anyway, my friend has a check that he wants to use of about $23k. My question is: is it better to put the $23k towards the auto loan right now (ensuring that the money goes towards the principal) or is there a better alternative like placing the money in a HYSA and earn about a 5% interest (I know it can fluctuate) and use that account to pay off the debt gradually? He’d be paying a lot more than the minimum monthly as well. I guess the only upside to this is though is having more cash liquid if ever needed.

  • ambuguity@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    If you decide to make the payment, make sure it’s applied toward the principle not the interest first. I made the mistake of just making extra or higher payments on a vehicle loan and the bank applied it toward the anticipated interest first. There was no prepayment penalty so I thought I was in the clear to just do so. Yes it shortened the life of the loan and how much interest I total would be paid, but banks will always look after there own …ahem… interests.

    • ZoomyRT@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Does it even matter if the money goes towards anticipated interest? If the loan is still going you’re going to pay that interest anyway no?