Mortgage Basics

Refinance Basics: When & Why to Replace Your Loan

Refinancing replaces your current mortgage with a new one, usually to lower the rate, change the term, or pull cash out of your equity. Here's how to know whether a refinance actually pays for itself.

The Two Main Types of Refinance

Rate-and-term refinance. You replace your existing loan with a new loan of the same amount (or close to it) at a different rate, term, or both. The goal is usually a lower monthly payment, a lower total interest paid, or a faster payoff. No cash comes back to you.

Cash-out refinance. You replace your existing loan with a larger loan and pocket the difference. Useful for home improvements, debt consolidation, investment property down payments, or any large expense where home equity is your lowest-rate source of funds. Cash-out refis typically have slightly higher rates and stricter loan-to-value limits.

When Refinancing Actually Makes Sense

The classic guideline is the 1% rule: if today's rate is 1% lower than your current rate, refinancing is probably worth it. That's a useful starting heuristic but not the whole picture.

The more accurate framework is the break-even calculation: divide your total closing costs by your monthly payment savings. The result is the number of months it takes for the refinance to pay for itself. If you plan to stay in the home longer than the break-even period, it makes sense. Use our Refinance Calculator to run the numbers on your specific loan.

Other valid reasons to refinance even without a big rate drop: switching from an ARM to a fixed-rate loan, dropping PMI by getting to 80% LTV, shortening the term to pay off the loan faster, or pulling cash out at a lower rate than a personal loan or HELOC.

Cash-Out Refinance: When It Makes Sense (and When It Doesn't)

Cash-out refis make sense when: (a) you have a use for the funds that earns you more than the loan's interest rate (renovations that increase home value, investment opportunities), or (b) you're consolidating high-interest debt into a lower-rate mortgage.

They don't make sense when: (a) your current first-mortgage rate is much lower than today's market rates (you'd be giving up a great rate on your entire balance), or (b) you'd be using the cash for depreciating purchases like cars, vacations, or consumer goods. In the first case, a second mortgage or HELOC is usually a smarter option, it keeps your low first-mortgage rate intact.

The Refinance Process, Start to Close

Refinances follow roughly the same process as a purchase loan, but typically faster: Day 1-3: Application, credit pull, initial document collection, loan estimate issued. Day 3-15: Appraisal ordered (or waived), underwriting begins. Day 15-25: Conditional approval, final document submission, clear-to-close. Day 25-35: Closing disclosure issued (3-day waiting period required), signing, funding. Total: 21–35 days for most refis.

Federal law gives you a 3-day rescission period after signing on a primary-residence refinance, you can cancel for any reason and the loan will not fund. Use it if you change your mind.

Common Refinance Mistakes

Focusing only on the rate. The interest rate matters, but so do the closing costs. A 'low rate' loan with high costs may break even far later than a slightly higher-rate loan with lower costs.

Extending the term without thinking about it. Refinancing a 30-year mortgage into another 30-year mortgage years later can mean paying more total interest, even at a lower rate, because you've reset the clock. Consider a 15- or 20-year option if your budget allows.

Cashing out for the wrong reasons. Home equity is one of the most powerful financial tools you have. Don't burn it on depreciating assets or to fund a lifestyle you couldn't otherwise afford.

Refinancing too often. Each refinance costs money, even no-cost refinances build the cost into the rate or balance. The break-even math matters.

How to Get the Best Refinance Rate

Shop multiple lenders. Get loan estimates from 3-5 lenders on the same day with the same loan parameters. Mortgage pricing changes daily, so apples-to-apples comparison requires same-day quotes.

Improve your credit before applying. Pay down credit cards 30+ days before your refinance application. The pricing difference between a 720 and 760 FICO can be 0.25-0.5%, real money over the life of the loan.

Lower your loan-to-value. If you're close to the 80% LTV threshold, bringing cash to closing to drop below 80% can eliminate PMI and improve pricing.

Choose the right term. 15-year loans typically have rates 0.4-0.8% lower than 30-year loans. If the monthly payment fits your budget, a 15-year refi saves enormous interest.

Frequently Asked

Common Questions

How long does a refinance take?

Typically 21-35 days from application to funding. Streamlined programs (FHA Streamline, VA IRRRL) can sometimes close faster.

How much does it cost to refinance?

Usually 1.5-3% of the loan amount. On a $500,000 refi, that's roughly $7,500-$15,000, but it can be covered with lender credits or rolled into the new loan.

Will refinancing hurt my credit?

Temporarily, the application produces a hard inquiry that may cost a few points. The benefit of a lower payment usually outweighs the short-term score impact.

Can I refinance with bad credit?

Yes, but your options narrow. FHA Streamline and VA IRRRL refinances have minimal credit requirements if you're refinancing an existing FHA or VA loan.

Do I need to refinance with my current lender?

No, you can refinance with any lender. Shopping multiple lenders is the single best way to get the lowest rate and lowest costs.

What's the difference between a refinance and a modification?

A refinance replaces your loan with a brand-new loan. A modification changes the terms of your existing loan (often through your servicer, often as a hardship option). Refinances are voluntary and rate-driven; modifications are usually hardship-driven.

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