Yep, I am now officially debt free. Everything is paid for. My last payment on debt is already set to go out tomorrow (auto payment). No car payments, no credit cards, no loans, no medical bills, nothing.
It took around 19 months to do but Im so giddy now its not even funny. When I come to work, Im working for me now, not for someone holding a debt over my head. I cant think of a better time to have become debt free either with the economy as it has been. We've already managed to put enough away to cover a couple months living expenses if anything were to happen on the job front but me and the wife are with pretty stable companies, in fact in a couple weeks my job is getting more work to do so I dont see anything happening there for the foreseeable future, I just got a raise to on top of the bonus I got.
As much as I would detest and abore doing so, if it came down to it for whatever reason, me and the wife have enough in 401k and Roth IRA investments that we could probably survive at our current spending levels for at least a year if not longer when you factor in all the penalties and taxes from dipping into such things.
Ive waited a long time to say it but the day has finally come. Me and the wife have agreed that once we get our taxes filled out and get our return we are going to go buy us a flat panel TV and stand in celebration. We've already got it all picked out too. 42" for the living room and then a smaller one to be put in the bedroom.
We are saving for a house now and I dont know if we will take out a loan for that or just save until we can pay for the thing in full. We are still batting the idea around. On the one hand if we buy a house now, we get the $8,000.00 tax credit which, once we have, we can turn around and put that back into paying off the house even faster. But one thing Ive learned along the way, buying a house for purely for the tax incintives is a bad idea, so we're trying to decide if we want to wait the couple years or so it would take for us to save up and just pay for the thing and have no mortgage.
Anyway, I just thought I would let everyone know and hopefully encourage others that it can be done. If I were to tell you the numbers behind the debt we cleared in such a short time I think it would astound most. And as improbable and impossible as it seemed, we were able to do it. It took a lot of sacrifice (waiting to get my car back on the road being one of them), and it most definitely took a solid committment to see it through to the very end, but here we are.