The math answer is straightforward: if your expected investment return after taxes exceeds your mortgage rate after the tax deduction (if any), investing wins on paper. With historical stock market returns averaging around 7% inflation-adjusted, and mortgage rates currently in the 6–7% range, the math is close — much closer than it was during the era of 3% mortgages.
The human answer is messier. Paying off a mortgage offers something investing doesn’t: a guaranteed risk-free return equal to your mortgage rate, plus the psychological certainty of owning your home outright. For many people, that certainty is worth giving up some expected return. The right answer depends on your rate, your risk tolerance, your tax situation, and your stage of life.
The Math Comparison
For a homeowner with $50,000 they could either invest or use to pay down the mortgage:
| Scenario | Mortgage Rate | Expected Investment Return | Likely Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low mortgage rate | 3% | 7% (stocks) | Invest |
| Moderate mortgage rate | 5% | 7% (stocks) | Invest, narrow margin |
| Current high rate | 7% | 7% (stocks) | Effectively tied |
| Above-market rate | 8%+ | 7% (stocks) | Pay off mortgage |
Bond returns change the comparison significantly — investing $50K in bonds returning 4–5% versus a 7% mortgage almost always favors paying down the mortgage.
What Changes the Math
Tax deductibility of mortgage interest. If you itemize and deduct mortgage interest, your effective mortgage rate is lower than the headline rate. But most filers now take the standard deduction, which removes this benefit entirely.
Where you’d invest. Maxing a 401(k) match before paying down the mortgage is almost always the right call — that match is effectively a 50% or 100% guaranteed return, which beats any mortgage.
Investment account type. A taxable brokerage return gets reduced by capital gains tax. A Roth IRA grows tax-free. The mortgage paydown comparison shifts depending on which account you’d use.
Your remaining term. If you’re 5 years from paying off a 30-year mortgage anyway, the math gets less meaningful. If you have 25 years left, decades of interest are still on the table.
The Cases for Paying Down
- You’re risk-averse. A guaranteed 7% return (eliminating a 7% mortgage) beats a probable 7% return (investing).
- You’re near retirement. Eliminating the mortgage payment dramatically reduces your required retirement income.
- Your mortgage rate is above 7%. The math itself favors paydown.
- You don’t itemize. No tax deduction means the effective and stated rates are the same.
- The emotional weight of debt bothers you. Don’t underestimate this — sleeping better is worth real money.
The Cases for Investing
- You have a low mortgage rate (under 5%, especially under 4%). The math overwhelmingly favors investing.
- You haven’t maxed retirement accounts yet. 401(k) match, IRA, HSA — these are all better targets than the mortgage.
- You’re far from retirement. Long horizons compound investment returns much more powerfully than mortgage paydown.
- You have an emergency fund of 6+ months. Mortgage paydown is illiquid — you can’t easily get it back if you need cash.
The Hybrid Approach Most Advisors Recommend
- Get any employer 401(k) match first — always
- Build a 6-month emergency fund
- Pay off high-interest debt (credit cards, anything over 8%)
- Max tax-advantaged accounts (IRA, HSA)
- Then split extra cash between extra mortgage payments and a taxable brokerage account
This avoids the all-or-nothing choice and balances the math and the emotion.
The Behavioral Risk
The biggest risk with “invest the difference” is that people often don’t actually invest it. If your alternative to extra mortgage payments is a brokerage account you’ll genuinely fund every month, the math comparison holds. If it’s “I’ll invest someday,” paying down the mortgage is the better real-world outcome.
Bottom Line
If your mortgage rate is under 4%, invest. If it’s over 7%, lean toward paying down. In the 4–7% range, it’s close enough that personal factors should drive the call — stage of life, risk tolerance, and how much the debt itself bothers you. The math people show you online assumes ideal investor behavior. Your actual decision should account for actual you.




