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Featured Mortgage Refinance Articles

Debt Negotiation Vs. Debt Management
Debt negotiation and debt management/consolidation both help consumers pay off their debts through two different approaches. Each affects your credit score, payoff period, and taxes differently. Before choosing either options, be sure you understand the ...

Refinancing Your Home - IS the Time Right?
Refinancing your home is a major decision not to be takenlightly, even in this era of low interest rates and easymoney. While every mortgage company in town is touting thestrategy of getting a new loan before rates rise again,there are several things ...

What Home Refinance does for you
Home Refinance - Basically, a home refinance is paying off one home loan with another loan. So the question is, should you refinance or not? How do you know when it is right for you to get a home refinance mortgage? In other words, when does home ...




Three Rules of Thumb for Mortgage Refinancing
 
You might think that deciding to refinance a mortgage requires only a quick comparison of loan interest rates. Unfortunately, that's not really true. Refinancing is trickier than that! Fortunately, three useful rules of thumb can often help you make sense of refinancing opportunities.

Rule 1: Don't Ignore Total Interest Costs

You really want to use refinancing as a way to reduce the total interest cost you pay. While that sounds simple in principle, it is sometimes difficult to do. The interest costs you pay are a function of the interest rate, the loan balance, and the loan term period.

When people refinance, they tend to focus solely on the loan interest rate. But they often don't pay as much attention to the loan term or the loan balance.

When you use refinancing--even refinancing at a lower interest rate--to increase your borrowing or to extend the time over which you borrow, you often aren't saving money.

Rule 2: Trade Expensive Money for Cheap Money

For refinancing to make economic sense, however, you do need to swap higher interest rate debt for lower interest rate debt. This calculation, however, is tricky. To make an apples-to-apples comparison, you must look at the annual percentage rate that will be charged on your new loan--this is the best measure of the new loan's interest rate cost--and then compare this to the loan interest rate on your old loan.

You don't want to compare interest rates on the two loans nor do you want to compare annual percentage rates on the two loans. Again, just to make this perfectly clear: You want to compare the loan interest rate on the old loan to the annual percentage rate on the new loan.

When the annual percentage rate on the new loan is lower than the loan interest rate on the old loan, then you are truly paying a lower interest rate.

Comparing annual percentage rates with loan interest rates seems confusing at first. But note that you would pay only interest on your old or current loan, so that's all you need to look at in terms of its costs. With a new loan, however, you would pay both interest and any origination or closing cost fees. The annual percentage rate wraps the interest rate charges and setup charges, origination charges, and closing cost fees into one interest rate-like number.

Rule 3: Don't Lengthen the Repayment Period

Be careful that you don't extend the length of time you borrow by continually refinancing. For example, one common rule of thumb states that every time interest rates drop by two percentage points, you should refinance your mortgage. However, there have been times in recent history when following this rule would have had you refinancing your mortgage every few years. This could mean that you would never get your mortgage paid off. If you refinanced every few years, you would suddenly find yourself still 30 years away from having your mortgage paid.

About the author:

Bellevue accountant & author Stephen L. Nelson is the author of Quicken for Dummies. He holds an MBA in Finance and an MS in taxation.



Mortgage Refinance News

Paulson calls for replacing Fannie/Freddie - Birmingham Business Journal
Outgoing U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson reflected on the downfall and future of embattled mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in a speech before the Economic Club of Washington on Wednesday. He argued that there was widespread ...

Appraisers sound alarm on part of new federal standards - Arlington Heights Daily Herald
WASHINGTON - When you apply for a mortgage to buy or refinance a house, should you be concerned that your appraiser is being paid much less - maybe just half - of the $300 to $600 you're charged on your settlement sheet? Should you know who pockets ...

Is It Time To Refinance Your Mortgage? - Forbes
Looking to refinance your mortgage? Do it now. Interest rates for 15- and 30-year fixed-rate mortgages are heading south of 5%, where they haven't been since Richard Nixon was president. Average 15-year fixed-rate loans, for example, are 4.67 ...

Citigroup reaches agreement with key senators on mortgage bankruptcy ... - Minneapolis Star Tribune
So, I didn't refinance to buy a boat, new car, cabin or other things and I didn't buy a home with zero down that I couldn't afford. So my … read more reward is to help bailout those others who did just that. Stupid me huh? Is it too late to ...

Don't miss the refinance window - HometownAnnapolis.com
CHICAGO - Lured by low mortgage rates, many homeowners have been rushing to refinance. Interest is gaining for good reason: Eligible borrowers can lock in rates that haven't been this attractive in decades. "With interest rates hovering around 5 ...