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Should You Refinance Close to Retirement?

Should You Refinance Close to Retirement?

When mortgage rates are low -- and in early December 2020 the rates on both 30-year mortgages were at 2.82 percent, and the 15-year fixed-rate mortgage loans were at 2.38 percent -- refinancing to a shorter-term mortgage can save you tens of thousands of dollars.

If rates are low enough, you will be able to save this money without having to pay a monthly mortgage payment that's too high for your budget.

The Burden of Mortgage Interest

When you pay your mortgage bill each month, much of your payment goes toward interest. In fact, during the earlier years of your mortgage, most of your monthly payment will be used to pay interest.

Interest is essential and serves as the basis of the mortgage-lending industry. It is how mortgage lenders make their money and cover their risk when lending hundreds of thousands of dollars to homeowners.

However, mortgage interest can also cost homeowners hundreds of thousands of dollars during the life of their mortgage. If you have a $200,000 fixed-rate 30-year mortgage with an interest rate of 4 percent, you will pay more than $143,000 in interest alone if you take a full 30 years to pay off the loan.

That is a lot of money spent on interest. If you took that same 4 percent loan and changed it from a 30-year to a 15-year term, you would pay just more than $66,000 in interest over the 15-year repayment period. That is a saving of more than $77,000 in interest payments.

The Challenge

Of course, the challenge that comes with taking out a 15-year fixed-rate mortgage comes in the form of a higher monthly payment. Because the payback period for a 15-year loan is shorter than a 30-year loan, you will pay more each month. For instance, with a $200,000 15-year fixed-rate mortgage loan at an interest rate of 4 percent, you would pay about $1,479 a month. If you took that same $200,000 loan but with a 30-year term, you would pay just more than $954 a month.

For many homeowners, the higher monthly payment that comes with a 15-year fixed-rate mortgage will price it out of their budgets, despite the interest savings such a loan brings.

However, when mortgage interest rates are low from a historical perspective, the equation changes. Depending on the rate of your 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, you could refinance to a 15-year fixed-rate loan and enjoy the savings in interest while making a monthly payment that isn't that much higher than your current one.

Low Interest Rates

Consider the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage for $200,000 at an interest rate of 3.69 percent. Again, the monthly payment for that loan comes to about $919. If you took that same amount and refinanced it to a 15-year loan with a rate of 3.34 percent -- the average rate in early January 2020 --, your payment would be $1,414 a month.

That is just $495 more a month, or $5,940 more a year than you would have paid with your 30-year fixed-rate loan. That might seem like a lot but consider the interest savings. The 15-year fixed-rate loan at an interest rate of 3.34 percent would require you to pay a total of about $54,539 in interest if you took a full 15 years to pay back the loan. That is a lot less than the $130,995 in interest payments you would make with the 30-year fixed-rate loan at 3.69 percent interest.

If you want to reduce the amount of interest you will pay during the life of your mortgage, maybe it is time to investigate the benefits that come from refinancing to a shorter-term home loan. True, you will have to make a more substantial monthly mortgage payment. It is also true that you will have to review your household budget to determine if that mortgage payment will fit. However, if it does, you stand to save potentially tens of thousands of dollars in mortgage interest.

While it is true that mortgage interest is how mortgage lenders and banks make their money, you should look to minimize what you pay out regarding interest payments. Crunch the numbers to see if a shorter-term mortgage loan makes sense for you.

The articles on this site are for informational and educational purposes only.