Lower the interest rate
A rate-and-term refinance can make sense when the new rate reduces your monthly payment or lifetime interest enough to justify the closing costs.
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Mortgage refinance guide
A refinance should solve a clear problem: reduce the rate, improve the payment, shorten the payoff timeline, remove mortgage insurance, stabilize an adjustable rate, or use equity for a defined purpose. The right answer depends on your current loan, home value, credit profile, timeline, and total cost to close.
A rate-and-term refinance can make sense when the new rate reduces your monthly payment or lifetime interest enough to justify the closing costs.
Some homeowners refinance to reset the loan term, remove mortgage insurance, or improve cash flow. Compare the lower payment against any added years of interest.
Moving from a 30-year to a 20-year or 15-year loan can build equity faster and reduce total interest, but only if the higher payment fits your budget.
If an adjustable-rate mortgage is approaching its reset window, refinancing into a fixed-rate loan can trade uncertainty for payment stability.
The first fork in the road is whether you are improving the mortgage you already have or intentionally borrowing more against your equity. Both can be useful, but the costs, loan-to-value limits, and underwriting tradeoffs are different.
Refinance costs commonly include lender charges, discount points if you choose to buy down the rate, appraisal or valuation fees, title and settlement charges, recording fees, prepaid interest, and escrow setup. Some loans advertise “no closing cost,” but the cost may be covered by a lender credit in exchange for a higher rate.
The clean way to compare offers is to request Loan Estimates on the same day and line up rate, APR, total loan costs, lender credits, cash to close, and monthly payment. If the refinance saves money monthly, calculate how many months it takes to recover the cost. If the goal is cash-out or debt consolidation, compare the blended debt payment and the risk of moving unsecured debt onto your home.
A refinance usually makes sense when the payment savings, interest savings, loan-term change, mortgage-insurance removal, or cash-out goal is worth the closing costs and the time you expect to keep the new loan.
A rate-and-term refinance replaces your current mortgage mainly to improve rate, payment, or term. A cash-out refinance replaces your mortgage with a larger loan and pays you part of your home equity at closing.
Divide the refinance costs by the monthly savings. If closing costs are $4,000 and the new payment saves $200 per month, the simple break-even is 20 months. Also compare total interest and the new loan term, not just the monthly payment.
Often yes, if the new loan amount and equity position qualify. Rolling costs into the loan reduces out-of-pocket cash but increases the balance, so compare the payment, APR, and long-term interest cost.
Not automatically. If your current rate is far below today’s market, a cash-out refinance may be expensive compared with a HELOC or home equity loan. Run the numbers before replacing a low-rate first mortgage.
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