When Does Refinancing Make Sense?
Refinancing means replacing your current loan with a new one, usually to get a lower interest rate, reduce your monthly payment, or change your loan term. It can make sense when market rates have dropped since you took your loan, when your credit score has improved, or when you want to shorten your term to pay off the loan faster and save on total interest.
Refinancing is not always beneficial. If your new rate is only slightly lower, or if you plan to move or pay off the loan soon, the upfront costs may outweigh the savings. Use the break-even result above: if you expect to keep the loan longer than the break-even period, refinancing is more likely to pay off.
Understanding Break-Even
The break-even point is how many months it takes for your monthly savings from the new loan to equal the one-time costs of refinancing (such as processing fees, appraisal, or closing costs). Before that point, you have not yet "recovered" the cost of refinancing; after it, you are ahead. If you sell the property or pay off the loan before break-even, you may end up losing money on the refinance.
When comparing offers, always factor in all fees and use a refinance calculator—like the one on this page—to see your monthly savings, total savings over the new term, and break-even in months or years.
Fees to Consider
Refinancing often involves one-time costs. These can include application or processing fees, appraisal fees, title search and insurance, and in the case of mortgages, closing costs. Some lenders offer "no-closing-cost" refinances by rolling fees into the loan or charging a slightly higher rate. Enter any known fees in the calculator's processing fee field to see how they affect your break-even and total savings.
- Processing / origination fees: Charged by the lender to set up the new loan.
- Appraisal: Required for home loans to confirm property value.
- Title and closing: Common for mortgage refinances; vary by location and lender.
Frequently Asked Questions
There is no single rule; it depends on your remaining balance, term, and all refinancing costs. As a rough guide, a drop of 0.75% to 1% or more often makes refinancing worth considering for a long-term mortgage, but you should always run the numbers using your actual loan amount, remaining term, and fees.