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Are You Considering Refinancing Your Home Mortgage? Read This First And Save
Yourself Money!
By: John R. Blakefield
Refinancing your home mortgage can be a great decision- if it saves you money! A
homeowner naturally would not refinance if a new mortgage cost him or her more
money than it saved, but a good offer, and a quick decision without looking at
the long term effect can be a detrimental action, and could actually cost the
homeowner more than the original mortgage! Lenders are in the business of making
more money, so don’t expect all of them to be honest and do the future
comparison for you.
So you are considering refinancing because you believe you can get a better
monthly payment, a lower interest rate or a shorter term loan that you could pay
off more quickly and own your home sooner than your original loan. These are all
good reasons to refinance.
As a general rule, you should not refinance if the “safe margin” of balancing
costs of refinancing against savings is less than two percentage points higher
than the current market rate. You also need to determine how much longer you are
going to be in the house. It takes about 3-5 years to realize the savings, given
the costs, when you refinance.
Other factors that may make you want to refinance are getting a fixed rate loan
as opposed to a variable rate, converting to an adjustable rate loan with more
protective features such as lower cap rates, or remove cash from the equity
built in your home.
Refinancing usually involves the homeowner to pay off the original mortgage, and
sign for a new one with better conditions, whatever that may be for that
specific homeowner. Keep in mind that there may be costs attributed to paying a
mortgage off early, which are called prepayment penalties. If you are paying off
your first mortgage early, the lenders may charge penalty fees which basically
gives them their interest that would be paid if the mortgage were carried out
for the life of the loan. You may be able to add the closing costs to the new
mortgage and still have a smaller mortgage than the original one.
In order to decide if refinancing is right for you, you absolutely must compare
the original loan and new loan based on the future! The future period should be
how long you expect to keep the new loan. If the total costs of the new mortgage
are less than the current mortgage, then, and only then would you refinance.
As in any mortgage, you must look at the annual percentage rate and fees. You
have to make sure that the total costs of financing a new mortgage will be less
than the total savings in interest. To cut refinancing costs, you may ask for no
money upfront and then take a higher interest rate, leading to a higher monthly
payment. But if it is still less than the current mortgage, you could definitely
consider this as an option and not have to come up with a large upfront sum.
Always do your due diligence when considering financial changes. Be sure to have
the lender disclose all information to you and leave nothing unclear. If you
need help or clarification on information, ask for a professional for help! The
use of a financial calculator can also be useful. If it has been a while since
you have dealt in the mortgage industry, read up on new laws, current market
rates and interest rates, and other pertinent information that allow you to be
educated in the decision making process. There is a lot of information available
to you, and make sure it is correct by running it by a trusted source.
About the Author:
John R Blakefield is a mortgage and real estate specialist. For more
information, articles, news, tools and valuable resources on home mortgages or
investment loans, refinancing, debt solutions, visit this site: http://www.scourtheweb.com/mortgage/.
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