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I’m an engineer with $140k in student debt and $70k in savings. Should I pay it off or keep investing?


An engineering graduate called into The Ramsey Show with a question millions of professionals face: “I have about $140,000 from my engineering degree that I got. I’m in student loan debt. I built up about $70,000 between my savings and my brokerage account.” He admitted the tension out loud: “The numbers kind of say long term I’d make more money if I would leave it invested, but you’re thinking about it out and pay off my debt.”

Co-host Jade Warshaw didn’t blink. “Listen, I’m gonna take that money every single time and use it to pay off debt,” she said, arguing that “your income is the biggest wealth building tool you have.” Dave Ramsey cut to the punchline: “You’re just holding the bank’s 70 grand for them.”

Quick Read

  • Federal direct unsubsidized graduate student loans carry 7%-9% interest rates while the 10-year Treasury yield sits around 4.6%, making debt paydown the mathematically superior choice for most engineering graduates. High-yield savings accounts currently offer meaningful returns while providing the emergency liquidity cushion needed before aggressively paying down principal.

  • Freeing up $1,500+ monthly student loan payments immediately improves cash flow resilience during economic uncertainty, where consumer sentiment is near recessionary lows and the national personal savings rate has dropped to 4%.

  • A recent study identified one single habit that doubled Americans’ retirement savings and moved retirement from dream, to reality. Read more here.

The stakes are real. Get the math wrong and you torch tens of thousands of dollars over the loan’s life, or you leave yourself one layoff away from selling investments at the worst time to make a payment.

Read: Data Shows One Habit Doubles American’s Savings And Boosts Retirement

Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.

The verdict: Pay down the debt aggressively

The pure math supports the emotional argument. Federal direct unsubsidized loans for graduate students have been issued at roughly 7% to 9% in recent years, with Grad PLUS loans even higher. Engineering grads often carry a blended rate in that range. The 10-year Treasury yield is around 4.6%. The Fed Funds upper bound sits at 3.75%. The risk-free rate is well below a typical grad student loan rate.

Run the scenario. If your loan rate is 8% and you keep $70,000 invested expecting a long-run stock return of roughly 7% after taxes, you’re paying guaranteed 8% interest to chase a probabilistic 7%. Over a 10-year payoff window, that spread compounds into real money. The guaranteed interest savings beats the expected market return in most modeled outcomes without volatility risk.

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