bojangles808
WKR
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2014
- Location
- hawai'i
Trying to help my friend out but I feel a bit over my head on this one with giving him advice and know theres a lot out there in this community who have experience (both finance and divorce) so figured I'd give it a shot. Were in rural hawaii so getting professional advice on various matters isn't always the easiest. Basically his wife left him, took the kids to another island and filed for divorce, They are currently in mediation and he has consulted with a lawyer but he's trying to figure out if he can keep their house..
The house they own is on another island that neither live in right now that is rented out as he's stationed elsewhere (he's military). He bought the place maybe 8 years ago, built a second detached in law suite maybe 5 years ago and refinanced his original loan at 2.5%. with the loan to build the inlaw suite is paid off and with both the house and in law suite rented out + appreciation + low interest rate , it provides some really really good income while he been stationed elsewhere. He could possibly retire there too in the future.
Ex wants him to buy her out and cut her a check for half the equity (approx 240k) place just appraised for approx 900k. I told him to start shopping around for a home equity loan and log all his monthly expenses so he can get an idea for what his exact numbers are. but this is where we are getting confused and over our heads.
I'm pretty sure he just takes his monthly income (paycheck + military housing allowance + plus rental income) and less monthly expenses (child support + bills + monthly expenses+ mortgage+ rent + possible home equity payment) and see if he can survive.
Is there anything more to this?
Home equity loan > heloc right? He's in the military too so obviously shopping around for any programs he can benefit from but i think since it's not a primary home (rental) things might be a little stricter. I dono if its a good idea to take out a little more, something like 300K, (cushion, lawyer costs?) either.
he doesn't have any truck payment or any stupid debt like that so i think it's pretty straight forward with the numbers. Just food, gas, cell phone bill, insurance etc normal stuff. The part that is still mysterious is the child support which could be in the 2-3k a month range so that possibly could swing things one way or another. I'm really hoping he can keep the house, because him building the in law suite + plus refinancing the low interest rate really has him set up tremendously in the future. It's in hawaii too and only going to appreciate more/create more financial stability for him.
WHo would he reach out to for better assessment of his financial options? seems like "financial advisors" are mostly retirement related but is there a subset for this type of divorce situation? or is it better off going with someone local, edward jones type? any guidance is appreciated.Thanks in advance
The house they own is on another island that neither live in right now that is rented out as he's stationed elsewhere (he's military). He bought the place maybe 8 years ago, built a second detached in law suite maybe 5 years ago and refinanced his original loan at 2.5%. with the loan to build the inlaw suite is paid off and with both the house and in law suite rented out + appreciation + low interest rate , it provides some really really good income while he been stationed elsewhere. He could possibly retire there too in the future.
Ex wants him to buy her out and cut her a check for half the equity (approx 240k) place just appraised for approx 900k. I told him to start shopping around for a home equity loan and log all his monthly expenses so he can get an idea for what his exact numbers are. but this is where we are getting confused and over our heads.
I'm pretty sure he just takes his monthly income (paycheck + military housing allowance + plus rental income) and less monthly expenses (child support + bills + monthly expenses+ mortgage+ rent + possible home equity payment) and see if he can survive.
Is there anything more to this?
Home equity loan > heloc right? He's in the military too so obviously shopping around for any programs he can benefit from but i think since it's not a primary home (rental) things might be a little stricter. I dono if its a good idea to take out a little more, something like 300K, (cushion, lawyer costs?) either.
he doesn't have any truck payment or any stupid debt like that so i think it's pretty straight forward with the numbers. Just food, gas, cell phone bill, insurance etc normal stuff. The part that is still mysterious is the child support which could be in the 2-3k a month range so that possibly could swing things one way or another. I'm really hoping he can keep the house, because him building the in law suite + plus refinancing the low interest rate really has him set up tremendously in the future. It's in hawaii too and only going to appreciate more/create more financial stability for him.
WHo would he reach out to for better assessment of his financial options? seems like "financial advisors" are mostly retirement related but is there a subset for this type of divorce situation? or is it better off going with someone local, edward jones type? any guidance is appreciated.Thanks in advance