Refinancing is a common financial choice among home owners. Refinancing is much like taking out a second mortgage. The terms of the mortgage are usually changed, offering the home buyer a lower interest rate, a shorter term, all of which can save the home buyer money.
Refinancing is not a good option for every home buyer. Because it does involve costs and fees to refinance, sometimes the savings are just not enough to justify the refinancing. You will encounter the same type of processes that you did with your first mortgage, and therefore identical costs. This includes closing fees, broker or lender fees, underwriting fees, and more.
To start, refinancing is not worth while if your current interest rate is less than two percentage points from the prevailing market rate. This is a generally accepted number also known as the safe margin. This safe margin balances the costs of refinancing a mortgage against the savings.
The first condition that makes refinancing good financial senses is when a home owner wants to get out of a high interest rate that is costing him or her more money than it is necessary. If your credit has improved, or you bought when the interest rates were really high, you could get a new mortgage with a much lower interest rate. This can save you thousands of dollars in the long term. It is important to know that you must want to live in the house long enough to make the additional fees that you will be paying worthwhile. So before you refinance, understand what your living plans are in the near to distant future so you can reap the benefits of refinancing.
The second condition is a home buyer who has an adjustable rate mortgage that is causing fluctuating, instable payments. The home buyer may want to have more stable payments and know exactly how much the payments are going to be for the life of the loan. If the interest rates jump suddenly, then the payments could too, causing a big dent in your bank account. A home owner may want to eliminate this possibility by getting a fixed rate loan instead of an adjustable rate loan.
The third condition is if the home owner wants to keep the adjustable rate mortgage, but get a better rate or more protective feature such as caps. The current adjustable rate mortgage may have a high interest rate. So the home owner could get an adjustable rate mortgage that will have a total lower payment, regardless if the index rate, dictating the current market rate, increases or decreases. Also, the current adjustable rate mortgage may not have caps, or limits set on how high the actual rate is. Caps can limit the rate from getting too high.
The fourth condition is if the home owner wants to build up the equity in the home faster by getting a shorter term. When the mortgage is thirty years, it takes a long time to build up the equity in the home. By converting to a shorter term, like fifteen or ten years, then the equity in the home will be built up in half the time. The owner will own the home free and clear in a shorter amount of time, and not owe money to a mortgage lender.
The fifth condition is if the home owner wants to take out some equity in the house, and use it make a major purchase, send a kid to college, or make improvements on the home. By refinancing, the home owner can use the equity built up in the house towards these things. This is a major benefit of owning your own home. This is also a main reason why people refinance a home.
If you fall under any of these conditions, do some research and see if refinancing is right for your financial situation. Always do the math and see if you are really going to save money versus the expenses of refinancing.
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/.