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Cost vs rate

Refinance closing costs vs rate

A lower rate is valuable only if the cost to get it makes sense for your timeline.

Every refinance has two sides.

The rate tells you what the new loan costs over time. Closing costs tell you what it costs to get the new loan. You need both to make a decision.

Example

If a refinance costs $8,000 and saves $300 per month, the simple break-even is about 27 months. If it costs $8,000 and saves only $80 per month, the break-even is more than eight years.

What changes the answer

  • Loan balance.
  • Rate reduction.
  • Points.
  • Lender credits.
  • How long you expect to keep the loan.

Use these next

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Do not compare the rate by itself

A refinance quote is a package. The rate matters, but so do points, lender credits, closing costs, appraisal assumptions, lock timing, and how long the homeowner expects to keep the loan.

A quote with a lower rate can be more expensive if the cost to get that rate takes too long to recover.

Quote questions worth asking every time

  • What is the rate with zero points?
  • Are lender credits included?
  • What are the total closing costs?
  • Which costs could still change?
  • How long is the break-even period?
  • What happens if I sell, move, or refinance again?

The practical test

A good quote should get clearer when you ask questions. If the quote becomes harder to understand, or if the conversation shifts back to the headline rate every time you ask about cost, slow down and compare the structure more carefully.

Next decision

Why the refinance decision matters

Most refinance confusion shows up in the quote. A homeowner may see a lower rate but miss the points, lender credits, closing costs, lock timing, or assumptions behind the number.

The safer approach is to compare the whole structure: what the loan costs, what it saves, and how long it takes to recover the cost.

A better quote conversation

  • Ask what the rate is without points.
  • Ask whether credits are being used to offset costs.
  • Ask which fees are lender-controlled and which are third-party.
  • Ask what could change before closing.
  • Ask how the quote fits your goal.