Choosing To Refinance Your Mortgage
Interest rates on mortgages and loans are extremely low. These rates are the lowest they have been in decades. Along with this low interest rate comes colossal opportunity for owners of real estate to reduce their principal and interest payments. Determining whether or not it makes sense to refinance is dependent on your unique situation, as well as if you can save enough money through the refinance to justify the expense. The analysis is a relatively straightforward, but you should understand the procedure so that you may benefit from renewing your mortgage.
When trying to decide if refinancing your mortgage is a good idea, you first need to look at what you owe and how much you pay each month. Then you need to evaluate the costs and payment associated with the new loan. If refinancing will reduce your payment and not add years or significant cost, then the refinancing your mortgage makes sense.
The simplest way to see if refinancing your mortgage makes sense from a quantitative point of view is to make a list that includes your payoff, your monthly payment, and the number of payments that have yet to be made. Multiply the number of left over payments by your current mortgage payment each month and record this number.
Under the previous number record the amount that you need to refinance, the period for the new loan, and the approximate mortgage payment. You can do all of these calculations quickly with a spreadsheet, or downloadable mortgage calculator. Make sure that you take into account the costs to refinance when doing your calculations, as well as origination fees, appraisal fees and transfer and escrow costs. Now repeat the same calculation as before, multiply the total number of payments by the monthly payment amount.
If you are not pulling out any equity during the refinance, the refinance makes the most common sense if you can lower your mortgage payment, and if the whole amount paid (number of payments multiplied by the monthly payment) after the refinance is lower than the entire amount to be due on your current note. If the mortgage payment is lower than your current payment, but the full amount is larger, you should decide if paying a reduced amount of monthly outweighs the greater amount you will need to shell out. The opposite decision is requisite if your payment increases but the overall amount due decreases. In both of these cases, caution must be used to be sure that you make the right decision.
One think to take into consideration as you go through the above analysis is that the current mortgage must equal the amount that you are refinancing. If the refinance amount exceeds the amount presently due on the mortgage then a much more complicated analysis is warranted. For this type of analysis, you will need a spread sheet with present value and amortization calculations. If you are not comfortable with these types of calculations, consult a financial adviser or accountant to assist with quantifying your decision.
Visit GRAR and MRMLS to learn more about investing in real estate and financing your mortgage. GRAR helps real estate professionals succeed.
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