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Invest vs Pay Off Mortgage Early: Which Strategy Wins in 2026?

๐Ÿ“… March 3, 2026โฑ 8 min readโœ๏ธ LoanCalc365 Editorial Team

You have an extra $500 per month. Should you put it into investments โ€” stocks, ETFs, retirement accounts โ€” or use it to pay off your mortgage early? This is one of the most debated personal finance questions of our time. The math-only answer might surprise you. The right answer for you depends on more than math.

6.8%Avg Mortgage Rate 2026
10.2%S&P 500 Avg Annual Return
+$82KSavings from Extra $200/mo
7โ€“10yrBreak-Even Timeline

The Mathematical Case for Investing

The standard financial math says: if your investment return exceeds your mortgage interest rate, invest. The S&P 500 has returned approximately 10.2% annually over the past 50 years. If your mortgage rate is 6.8%, the math suggests investing wins by 3.4 percentage points per year.

Let's model $500/month extra over 20 years:

StrategyAfter 20 YearsAfter 30 Years
Invest $500/mo at 8% avg return$294,510$745,180
Pay extra on 6.8% mortgage$183,000 interest saved + paid off 9yr earlyMortgage free in year 21
Do both (split $250 each)$147,255 invested + $91,500 savedBest of both worlds

The pure numbers favor investing โ€” but this assumes consistent 8% returns, which never actually happen in a straight line.

The Mathematical Case for Paying Off Mortgage

Paying down your mortgage gives you a guaranteed, risk-free return equal to your interest rate. In 2026, with mortgages at 6.8%, that's a better risk-free return than most bonds or savings accounts.

Investment returns are volatile. The S&P 500 has had years of -38% (2008), -19% (2022), and similar drawdowns. A paid-off house always has that value, regardless of market conditions.

The Risk-Adjusted Comparison

Comparing 10.2% stock returns to 6.8% mortgage rate is misleading because stocks carry significant risk. On a risk-adjusted basis, the guaranteed 6.8% return from paying down your mortgage is equivalent to roughly 9โ€“10% in stocks โ€” making the strategies much closer to equal than they appear.

Tax Considerations Change the Math

Mortgage interest is tax-deductible for those who itemize (though the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act reduced itemizers to just 11% of filers). Investment gains in taxable accounts are subject to capital gains tax (0โ€“20%). Tax-advantaged accounts (401k, IRA, Roth IRA) change the calculation significantly:

The Right Order of Financial Priorities

  1. Build 3โ€“6 month emergency fund first โ€” non-negotiable
  2. Contribute to 401k up to full employer match โ€” free money
  3. Pay off high-interest debt (credit cards, personal loans above 8%)
  4. Max out Roth IRA ($7,000/year in 2024)
  5. Here's the fork: Max out 401k vs extra mortgage payments
  6. Taxable investing vs mortgage โ€” this is where the math is closest

Psychological Factors That Actually Matter

Personal finance is more personal than financial. Consider:

"The best financial strategy is the one you can actually follow through on โ€” not just in bull markets, but when the market drops 40%."

โ€” Financial planning principle

Our Recommendation by Scenario

Your SituationRecommended Strategy
Mortgage rate above 7%Pay extra on mortgage โ€” guaranteed return beats most bonds
Have employer 401k matchAlways take the match first, then decide
High job security, long horizonInvest in diversified index funds
Variable income or near retirementPrioritize paying off mortgage
Unsure / anxious about marketsSplit 50/50 โ€” best of both worlds

See How Extra Payments Affect Your Mortgage

Model different extra payment scenarios and see exactly how many years and dollars you save.

Try the Mortgage Calculator โ†’