I am not a wealthy man, 27-year truck driver that did plan for retirement and never learned to manage or save money. With that being said at 62 I own my own home; I purchased it on a 15-year mortgage and paid it off in 7. I do however have a habit of purchasing things I really do not need. I think this is because most of my life I was never able to purchase the things I wanted. This is a habit that I need to break. I WANT TO THANK YOU FOR TAKING THE TIME TO CREATE THE VALUABLE CONTENT ON THIS CHANNEL, YOU ARE A TRUE BLESSING TO ALL THAT WILL APPLY YOUR KNOWLEDGE.
This is a real problem I find with my clients it really stems from the belief of not having enough, it i simple to break tell yourself aloud I believe I am scared I don;t have enough I break it, in a commanding voice. This changes the brains thinking , you can use this in every situation in many was the I break it really changes thinking patterns by disruption. All the best and you have done very well.
Hey Christy, hey Chris - Greetings from Australia. I love your work, like so many others here! Just great. Something that I thought might be useful for you to point out to your viewers that the interest received from a savings account is taxable as income (ie not a 401K, but a cash savings account, at least here in Oz), whereas the interest on a credit card is probably not tax deductible unless it's involved with creating income. Even more of an incentive to get rid of non-deductible debt before trying to build taxable savings.
Hi Christy, I have been watching your videos for some time and want to get started. I’m 67 and make about 4000 income. Expenses are around 1300 and debt payments are approximately 1600. I owe 55000 on the mortgage but have a lean from a business bankruptcy 10 years ago on the deed for 92000. House value over $350,000.
Christy, I love how you help illustrate and educate us on how we can utilize LOC to pay of debt through the velocity banking process. The ultimate LOC for myself is my residence. It has been very difficult for my wife and I to find a lender that offers a 1st Lien HELOC (All-In-One mortgage) product. Can you advise all of us on lenders/brokers/companies that can help us through the process of securing and leveraging this LOC? Thanks
I was thinking like you Christy. I’m like why put my money in a segregated account. Just do things the velocity way and maybe things will be paid 1-2 year earlier. I’m glad to hear this video. Thank you both
This was an exceptional video. Wish I had this knowledge during my earning years. Is there an example that would work for someone on lower income/social security?
I love this example. I opened a WL policy last year and used it to pay down some debt. I have a little more debt to be free except my mortgage. This is a perfect example of how I can use the policy to work off the debt and set up for the future in retirement.
Hello Christy, I'm new to your channel, I found it on Christmas day. I've learned of the IBC in 2016, started a policy with a reputable agent. Only wish I had learned of the Velocity banking several yrs prior, but I'm learning about it now even though I've only got $1600 worth of debt to go on 0% interest accts. Am excited to share your videos with my kids and friends. I really appreciate your teachings and concepts. Thank you!
Every reinsurance person should be taught how to help her clients like this cause I tried to find an insurance person. Well, I had an insurance person, but she didn’t know how to help me like this. She just kept telling me you can’t get the money if you get the money, it’s not gonna work.
Question in regards to HELOC. If a person qualify for 100K HELOC, and owe 65K in debt (car loans, student loans, CC etc - not counting the outstanding mortgage balance). Do you think it better to pay off the entire 65K ( one draw) debt with the HELOC or take on smaller draw of 20K, until the debt is paid down and then take another draw 20K and continue to process until the entire 65K is paid. That is my question - paid off the entire debt with the HELOC or take it on with smaller debt at a time.
In your shoes opinion. Myself, I would go with the 20K chunks. This gives me peace of mind that I have 80K on the HELOC in case of emergency. If you decide to go with the 65K chunk it works but it'll feel suffocating at some point. The constant 20K chunk makes it feel like light work, because your constantly advancing. In reality up to you. Have a great day.
I realize HELOCs generally have best rates but paying off unsecured debts with secured debt in this economy is risky. I would look at a personal line of credit and/or use credit card. Same principle but different tool. Depending on how sensitive you are to your credit score you may have to pay attention to your utilization. For most folks the principle remaining on their mortgage is highest debt thus the most savings comes from paying down mortgage. Personally I would pay off the items I could pay off first. That lowers your monthly payments and improves cash flow. Then chunk heavily towards the mortgage. If you put all your $ towards mortgage it is a closed end loan. In bad economies HELOCs are difficult to get. Depending on your specific situation I might split my efforts 50% to mortgage, 50% to other debts. I did this "velocity banking" before it had a name.
Not gonna tell you how to do. But maybe run the numbers first of cash flow each month first. Makes no sense to me to do all 65k at once. If it was my circumstance only. Pay 50 to 100 dollars a day to principal from the heloc to the mortgage instead of chunk method. I ran the numbers in my circumstance and it cuts down interest even more thank the chunk strategy. Of course still doing the sweep action. 50 dollars a day is 1500 a month. That interest will chop quickly. Again that for me would work best. But I'm wanting to pay off my 292k mortgage in under 10 years. 4 years into into it. Just learned about velocity. And it's the boss way to get your money working for you. On God!
Christy may see this reply and correct me if I'm wrong. In some of her previous videos, she recommends using 30 - 50% of your HELOC/PLOC at a time so that you're not committing yourself to so much to it, and also by doing this, you'll see yourself making progress paying down your debt which will help you stay motivated and committed to doing it. But ultimately, the decision is yours to make. Hope this helps. Good luck.
This is a great strategy. Im using it as a hedge in addition to byob strategy. 😊 Instead of finding a way to downplay this strategy you meed to figure out a way to implement this strategy! Idk get a heloc, or borrow up to half that money you got sitting in that 401k with no penalties. Then pay yourself back 😊.
So he saved 25k then purchased the WL… then borrowed against it, then paid debt, then bought an additional 25k, then borrowed, then paid debt, and repeat. Then at the end he took his 25 K he'd normally buy another 25k WL added the saved 5k principle he was paying and paid 30k a year until those liens were paid back… did I understand correctly?
Is this possible if you are not able to save anything right now and you're more in the red than the black? Would I have to do some velocity banking to get in the black first?
You can usually use velocity banking to work yourself out of a smallish negative cash flow situation. I did this years ago before it had a name. Using a credit card, I paid all bills I could with card and just ran all my income to card. It is easier on a line of credit because of fewer limitations. In this economy I would be hesitant to use a HELOC. generally paying off unsecured debt with secured debt is risky, especially if you have negative cash flow.
New to all of this but find your videos very interesting and helpful, thank you Christy!!! Question: just got started on getting a HLOC and waiting to close. From what I have learned from your videos Christy I was thinking to … Once I have the HELOC funds it’s enough to pay off ALL my debt (which is A LOT😮)except my mortgages. This will free up the money I was paying monthly which I will be paying my HELOC MIN MONTHLY PLUS more to start paying down my HELOC faster and from my calculations it will take me 4 1/2 years to do so. I have a side business outside of my W2 income that I’m not including in my plan. So my question is should I take my side business income and apply to my HELOC to get paid back down even faster then purchase a WL or use my side business income to purchase a WL ?
So do you repay the loan from the whole life while you are paying down your debt? If not, then when are the loans due? That wasn’t clear to me in the presentation.
I think the $25k the chiropractor was saving every month, he was putting it into the policy from what I understand monthly. If no payments were made, he would owe his insurance loan back $138,324.00.
What if a person lives outside of the U.S., can they still do the infinite banking concept? And what is the minimum amount of contribution you have to make to a policy? Thanks.
@richard Great questions! The teams I work with currently cannot write policies outside of the U.S. Minimums are according to individual situations. For a monthly premium amount to be highly effective with forming cash value …10 x your current age is favorable. So if you’re 40 years old, then a $400 per month premium would be effective in the specially designed policy.
Is there a policy that offers a Bitcoin valued whole life insurance that we save in Bitcoin and borrow against my own Bitcoin as collateral that earns interest and receives fiat dollars to use? Can a policy be designed with the Asset Bitcoin?
Love your content! Question: would you suggest credit card consolidation to pay off maxed out credit cards? That current 29% just has me on a chokehold. Total cc is $20k. Interest of loan is 6.4%. My plan is to pay off in 6 months. Or does velocity banking a better way to go?
I’m 52 years old, I got a policy with a friend, is not that pricey. My policy is 450k and I pay monthly 179. And I have health issues, high cholesterol. Like they said the policy was designed to meet the needs when I departed, my friend told me to get my cholesterol down and they can re- adjust the policy so I can have the cash value.
Two things: 1) should not look at a policy as an expense, but instead as capitalizing an asset… an asset that contractually guarantees access to policy loans - a HELOC depends on bank approval of terms. Infinite banking allows for the same process value of Velocity Banking, but with certainty that the terms are in your control. 2) I started my first policy at 55, after several years of performing velocity banking. The delta in the cost of underlying insurance does not detract significantly from the capitalizing of cash value. If in doubt, at least lock in a convertible term policy to allow yourself to implement in the future while mulling the concept over.
Save yourself 45 minutes. Anything woth interest oay it off. Do not hold a balance that has interest that will cost you to pay more money. Never do payment plans.
Why would someone have 10k in credit card debt and 25k in savings? That's bad planning from the jump. If you have more cash than you owe stop paying interest on a loan you don't need.
@VanntasticFinances , okay, but if a person takes money out of an IRA because the interest is less that what the CCards take, there is capital gains tax, correct?
@VanntasticFinances I understand, but if a person wants to pay off their high interest ccards with ira money, they will be charged withdrawal fees and taxes. Even if the ira earns less than ccards.
@@LP-MeAndMyShadowtaxes & penalties would have to be paid if you withdraw from your IRA, 401k or such investment accounts (if pre-taxed) if under 59½ (I think) and taxed older, but you don't want to do this which is why they were talking about getting a loan from this type of life insurance which is tax free.
This guy is using a whole lot of words to explain a whole lot of nothing. Unless he’s just ‘common sense’ man. I like your videos and I am successfully using your advice but will skip his episodes.
I am not a wealthy man, 27-year truck driver that did plan for retirement and never learned to manage or save money. With that being said at 62 I own my own home; I purchased it on a 15-year mortgage and paid it off in 7. I do however have a habit of purchasing things I really do not need. I think this is because most of my life I was never able to purchase the things I wanted. This is a habit that I need to break. I WANT TO THANK YOU FOR TAKING THE TIME TO CREATE THE VALUABLE CONTENT ON THIS CHANNEL, YOU ARE A TRUE BLESSING TO ALL THAT WILL APPLY YOUR KNOWLEDGE.
This is a real problem I find with my clients it really stems from the belief of not having enough, it i simple to break tell yourself aloud I believe I am scared I don;t have enough I break it, in a commanding voice. This changes the brains thinking , you can use this in every situation in many was the I break it really changes thinking patterns by disruption. All the best and you have done very well.
Hey Christy, hey Chris - Greetings from Australia.
I love your work, like so many others here! Just great.
Something that I thought might be useful for you to point out to your viewers that the interest received from a savings account is taxable as income (ie not a 401K, but a cash savings account, at least here in Oz), whereas the interest on a credit card is probably not tax deductible unless it's involved with creating income. Even more of an incentive to get rid of non-deductible debt before trying to build taxable savings.
Hi Christy, I have been watching your videos for some time and want to get started. I’m 67 and make about 4000 income. Expenses are around 1300 and debt payments are approximately 1600. I owe 55000 on the mortgage but have a lean from a business bankruptcy 10 years ago on the deed for 92000. House value over $350,000.
Christy, I love how you help illustrate and educate us on how we can utilize LOC to pay of debt through the velocity banking process. The ultimate LOC for myself is my residence. It has been very difficult for my wife and I to find a lender that offers a 1st Lien HELOC (All-In-One mortgage) product. Can you advise all of us on lenders/brokers/companies that can help us through the process of securing and leveraging this LOC? Thanks
I was thinking like you Christy. I’m like why put my money in a segregated account. Just do things the velocity way and maybe things will be paid 1-2 year earlier. I’m glad to hear this video. Thank you both
This was an exceptional video. Wish I had this knowledge during my earning years. Is there an example that would work for someone on lower income/social security?
I love this example. I opened a WL policy last year and used it to pay down some debt. I have a little more debt to be free except my mortgage. This is a perfect example of how I can use the policy to work off the debt and set up for the future in retirement.
Happy New Year!
Hello Christy, I'm new to your channel, I found it on Christmas day. I've learned of the IBC in 2016, started a policy with a reputable agent. Only wish I had learned of the Velocity banking several yrs prior, but I'm learning about it now even though I've only got $1600 worth of debt to go on 0% interest accts.
Am excited to share your videos with my kids and friends. I really appreciate your teachings and concepts.
Thank you!
Every reinsurance person should be taught how to help her clients like this cause I tried to find an insurance person. Well, I had an insurance person, but she didn’t know how to help me like this. She just kept telling me you can’t get the money if you get the money, it’s not gonna work.
Awesome information
Wish we could do this in Australia
My question is were can you start a whole life insurance policy
My question as well. And to get a policy you need to have good health to get a policy
Go here to schedule a consultation and learn more... moneyschoolrei.com/christy
@Bruce Go here to learn more and schedule a consultation... moneyschoolrei.com/christy
Question in regards to HELOC. If a person qualify for 100K HELOC, and owe 65K in debt (car loans, student loans, CC etc - not counting the outstanding mortgage balance). Do you think it better to pay off the entire 65K ( one draw) debt with the HELOC or take on smaller draw of 20K, until the debt is paid down and then take another draw 20K and continue to process until the entire 65K is paid. That is my question - paid off the entire debt with the HELOC or take it on with smaller debt at a time.
I’m in the same boat. Following!!
In your shoes opinion. Myself, I would go with the 20K chunks. This gives me peace of mind that I have 80K on the HELOC in case of emergency. If you decide to go with the 65K chunk it works but it'll feel suffocating at some point. The constant 20K chunk makes it feel like light work, because your constantly advancing. In reality up to you. Have a great day.
I realize HELOCs generally have best rates but paying off unsecured debts with secured debt in this economy is risky. I would look at a personal line of credit and/or use credit card. Same principle but different tool. Depending on how sensitive you are to your credit score you may have to pay attention to your utilization. For most folks the principle remaining on their mortgage is highest debt thus the most savings comes from paying down mortgage. Personally I would pay off the items I could pay off first. That lowers your monthly payments and improves cash flow. Then chunk heavily towards the mortgage. If you put all your $ towards mortgage it is a closed end loan. In bad economies HELOCs are difficult to get. Depending on your specific situation I might split my efforts 50% to mortgage, 50% to other debts. I did this "velocity banking" before it had a name.
Not gonna tell you how to do. But maybe run the numbers first of cash flow each month first. Makes no sense to me to do all 65k at once. If it was my circumstance only. Pay 50 to 100 dollars a day to principal from the heloc to the mortgage instead of chunk method. I ran the numbers in my circumstance and it cuts down interest even more thank the chunk strategy. Of course still doing the sweep action. 50 dollars a day is 1500 a month. That interest will chop quickly. Again that for me would work best. But I'm wanting to pay off my 292k mortgage in under 10 years. 4 years into into it. Just learned about velocity. And it's the boss way to get your money working for you. On God!
Christy may see this reply and correct me if I'm wrong.
In some of her previous videos, she recommends using 30 - 50% of your HELOC/PLOC at a time so that you're not committing yourself to so much to it, and also by doing this, you'll see yourself making progress paying down your debt which will help you stay motivated and committed to doing it. But ultimately, the decision is yours to make. Hope this helps. Good luck.
This is a great strategy. Im using it as a hedge in addition to byob strategy. 😊
Instead of finding a way to downplay this strategy you meed to figure out a way to implement this strategy! Idk get a heloc, or borrow up to half that money you got sitting in that 401k with no penalties. Then pay yourself back 😊.
So, where do you go to find these specially designed whole life ins. policies?
@diane Learn more here…
moneyschoolrei.com/christy
So he saved 25k then purchased the WL… then borrowed against it, then paid debt, then bought an additional 25k, then borrowed, then paid debt, and repeat. Then at the end he took his 25 K he'd normally buy another 25k WL added the saved 5k principle he was paying and paid 30k a year until those liens were paid back… did I understand correctly?
So what about the loan interest you need to pay back to the insurance company? The insurance company charges you interest on the loan.
Very informative.
Where do I find SD whole life policies
Can you give some of the best Whole life company to go with?
How do you pay off the loans when you take it out of the policy?
Is this possible if you are not able to save anything right now and you're more in the red than the black? Would I have to do some velocity banking to get in the black first?
You can usually use velocity banking to work yourself out of a smallish negative cash flow situation. I did this years ago before it had a name. Using a credit card, I paid all bills I could with card and just ran all my income to card. It is easier on a line of credit because of fewer limitations. In this economy I would be hesitant to use a HELOC. generally paying off unsecured debt with secured debt is risky, especially if you have negative cash flow.
Can you do more examples of the infinite banking concept?
With someone that has an income of like 4500 a month.
New to all of this but find your videos very interesting and helpful, thank you Christy!!! Question: just got started on getting a HLOC and waiting to close. From what I have learned from your videos Christy I was thinking to … Once I have the HELOC funds it’s enough to pay off ALL my debt (which is A LOT😮)except my mortgages. This will free up the money I was paying monthly which I will be paying my HELOC MIN MONTHLY PLUS more to start paying down my HELOC faster and from my calculations it will take me 4 1/2 years to do so. I have a side business outside of my W2 income that I’m not including in my plan. So my question is should I take my side business income and apply to my HELOC to get paid back down even faster then purchase a WL or use my side business income to purchase a WL ?
What happens if you can't get a policy because of health problems? I have diabetes. Can I get a policy?
@sandykay291 You can get one on your kids/grandkids (or anyone with an insurable interest) and use it as your own.
@@VanntasticFinancesholy ghost fire
@@VanntasticFinances is that legal?
So do you repay the loan from the whole life while you are paying down your debt? If not, then when are the loans due? That wasn’t clear to me in the presentation.
@lucky Loans do not have to be repaid, but in this scenario, the chiropractor starts paying back loan in the 6th year
How is he saving the $25000.00 to pay for the WL?
Am i the only one having a difficult time understanding how this works??
@@jenna.w.9041you're not, it's complicated. Watch it several times, take notes. Watch other videos explaining the concept.
I think the $25k the chiropractor was saving every month, he was putting it into the policy from what I understand monthly. If no payments were made, he would owe his insurance loan back $138,324.00.
How much is the whole life insurance premium a year that you need to pay?
What percentage did u pay on the loan u took out on the whole life ins ? How much did that cost u . did not say that in your presentation
@GOKUBK I believe he said the rate is currently 5.25%
@ so around $ 1300 per year sound about right ?
How can those in Canada reach you?
What if a person lives outside of the U.S., can they still do the infinite banking concept? And what is the minimum amount of contribution you have to make to a policy? Thanks.
This is to bring me back here
@richard Great questions!
The teams I work with currently cannot write policies outside of the U.S. Minimums are according to individual situations. For a monthly premium amount to be highly effective with forming cash value …10 x your current age is favorable. So if you’re 40 years old, then a $400 per month premium would be effective in the specially designed policy.
@VanntasticFinances Thank you, Christy. God bless.
@@richardhurst8109amazing
Hello! is it hard to qualify for a policy if you have had health issues in the past?
@cindy It depends on health issues
I want to learn how!! I have an insurance license! I would love to work for this company!! Please how do I find what carriers you work for?
ty
Wtf do you mean. This is English
I’m wondering if that $5200 is before or after taxes. Also is that the average wage a person takes home.
This is not the MMA?
This also reflects that the "chiropractor" does not accumulate anymore debt?
@daniellejones No...not MMA. You can learn more here... moneyschoolrei.com/christy
So does this means that you are actually using the death benefit to repay the loan you took from the insurance company?
So when we pay the life insurance back. do we have to pay 205 thousands back??
❤
Is there a policy that offers a Bitcoin valued whole life insurance that we save in Bitcoin and borrow against my own Bitcoin as collateral that earns interest and receives fiat dollars to use? Can a policy be designed with the Asset Bitcoin?
Love your content!
Question: would you suggest credit card consolidation to pay off maxed out credit cards? That current 29% just has me on a chokehold. Total cc is $20k. Interest of loan is 6.4%. My plan is to pay off in 6 months.
Or does velocity banking a better way to go?
How do you deposit your paycheck to your credit card?
You have it deposited into bank then move it to CC.
You don't/cant do that.
@@jaredshowers1are you well?
If we have no savings can we still get a policy
@Jenfizz Yes, they allow monthly payments, but if you have a line of credit you could chunk directly from that, like I do.
💯
Does this work in Australia
I t would if you had the income and debts like shown .
so basically since the FED has been decreasing rates, then I assume there is no point in saving my money. Just put it toward more debt.
Actually, that's what you should of been doing to begin with. That's why savers are losers.
I’m 50 I’m way to old for this
My policy would be expensive
I’m 52 years old, I got a policy with a friend, is not that pricey.
My policy is 450k and I pay monthly 179. And I have health issues, high cholesterol.
Like they said the policy was designed to meet the needs when I departed, my friend told me to get my cholesterol down and they can re- adjust the policy so I can have the cash value.
@herimag I’m 53 and started 4 in the past 2 years.
Two things: 1) should not look at a policy as an expense, but instead as capitalizing an asset… an asset that contractually guarantees access to policy loans - a HELOC depends on bank approval of terms. Infinite banking allows for the same process value of Velocity Banking, but with certainty that the terms are in your control.
2) I started my first policy at 55, after several years of performing velocity banking. The delta in the cost of underlying insurance does not detract significantly from the capitalizing of cash value. If in doubt, at least lock in a convertible term policy to allow yourself to implement in the future while mulling the concept over.
I don’t know. Is it just me?I’m royally confused 😵💫
it takes a bit of time to process the concepts. Practise to get comfortable with what they are saying I was the same.
Save yourself 45 minutes. Anything woth interest oay it off. Do not hold a balance that has interest that will cost you to pay more money. Never do payment plans.
Why would someone have 10k in credit card debt and 25k in savings? That's bad planning from the jump. If you have more cash than you owe stop paying interest on a loan you don't need.
Yeah, but if a person takes money out of investment funds, they ard paying capital gains tax.
@LP Loans are not taxed and this isn’t an “investment fund”.
@VanntasticFinances , okay, but if a person takes money out of an IRA because the interest is less that what the CCards take, there is capital gains tax, correct?
@VanntasticFinances I understand, but if a person wants to pay off their high interest ccards with ira money, they will be charged withdrawal fees and taxes. Even if the ira earns less than ccards.
@@LP-MeAndMyShadow You are taking a loan against the policy. NOT a withdrawal 🙂
@@LP-MeAndMyShadowtaxes & penalties would have to be paid if you withdraw from your IRA, 401k or such investment accounts (if pre-taxed) if under 59½ (I think) and taxed older, but you don't want to do this which is why they were talking about getting a loan from this type of life insurance which is tax free.
This guy is using a whole lot of words to explain a whole lot of nothing. Unless he’s just ‘common sense’ man. I like your videos and I am successfully using your advice but will skip his episodes.
@endlessness80 I'm sorry you feel that way. I think he is THE BEST Infinite Banking teacher I have personally ever heard. Thanks for watching...
I learned this just a couple months ago from Dave Ramsey! 👍
@Desert 😂.. I somehow doubt that😂…Thanks for watching!
@@VanntasticFinancesI’m going the process of getting a HELOC right now. It feels so scary….I pray this works otherwise we’ll be homeless in 10 years.
@@VanntasticFinancesDave loathes whole life insurance lol
@@elsaromero4743 I'm well aware...
@@-vi2ys557 Then don't do it. It's just math.