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618

Edit: AOU added that insidious flare, not me.

I'm pretty giddy about this, thought I'd share my story...

I had guesstimated and budgeted for minor road repair and the final finish course of asphalt for ~4000ft of road in my subdivision three years ago. Stashed the cash in a bank account and it's been sitting there untouched, just collecting interest. It is the developer's obligation to apply the final course of asphalt prior to submitting private subdivision roads to the town before town acceptance to turn the private road into a town maintained public road.

I budgeted $125K, but the quotes I've received this week for the repairs and paving are around $82K!

It's like I've discovered $43K in after tax cash that I didn't know I had in the pocket of an old pair of jeans. Sweet!

The new windows, siding, roofing, etc planned for my old family homestead is going to cost me $43K less next year, a big chunk of the overall anticipated cost. There is always a good place for extra cash...

Yeah, it was my own damned fault for over budgeting in the first place but it all works out in the end. I'm in a much better situation than if I had under budgeted!

Edit: AOU added that insidious flare, not me. I'm pretty giddy about this, thought I'd share my story... I had guesstimated and budgeted for minor road repair and the final finish course of asphalt for ~4000ft of road in my subdivision three years ago. Stashed the cash in a bank account and it's been sitting there untouched, just collecting interest. It is the developer's obligation to apply the final course of asphalt prior to submitting private subdivision roads to the town before town acceptance to turn the private road into a town maintained public road. I budgeted $125K, but the quotes I've received this week for the repairs and paving are around $82K! It's like I've discovered $43K in after tax cash that I didn't know I had in the pocket of an old pair of jeans. Sweet! The new windows, siding, roofing, etc planned for my old family homestead is going to cost me $43K less next year, a big chunk of the overall anticipated cost. There is always a good place for extra cash... Yeah, it was my own damned fault for over budgeting in the first place but it all works out in the end. I'm in a much better situation than if I had under budgeted!

(post is archived)

[–] 2 pts

I saw the light 25+ years ago. I finally became debt free, and have stayed that way since 2006. It's definitely a lifestyle now. I love it!

I would still go to a bank for infrastructure loans ($500K-$1M - OUCH!) if I should proceed to build out another subdivision but I set the loan up to pay back the principal as quickly as possible. One of the keys to being a successful developer is to pay off debt as quickly as possible so the (((bank))) can never take it away from you.

[–] 2 pts

Good for you.

This is how you win. Don't go into debt. It's unbelievable how people finance things that have no residual value after the debt is incurred. Don't do it. It's one thing to finance infrastructure that has long lasting value well after the debt is paid.

[–] 1 pt

Good debt vs bad debt. Good debt allows you to make orders of magnitude more money than the debt will cost, like an investment of sorts.

Bad debt just slowly bleeds you dry by a thousand cuts.