⚖️ Refinance Break-Even Calculator

Calculate refinancing break-even point

Total closing costs for refinancing (typically 2-5% of loan amount)

How to Use This Calculator

1

Enter Current Loan Details

Input your current loan balance, interest rate, and remaining loan term. This represents your current mortgage or loan situation.

2

Enter New Loan Details

Enter the new interest rate and loan term for the refinance loan you're considering. This will be compared to your current loan.

3

Enter Closing Costs

Enter the total closing costs for refinancing (typically 2-5% of loan amount). This includes origination fees, appraisal fees, title insurance, and other fees.

4

Review Break-Even Analysis

See the break-even point (how long it takes to recoup closing costs), monthly savings, and whether refinancing makes financial sense. Use this to make informed refinancing decisions.

Formula

Monthly Payment = P × [r(1 + r)ⁿ] / [(1 + r)ⁿ - 1]

Monthly Savings = Current Payment - New Payment

Break-Even Months = Closing Costs ÷ Monthly Savings

Example Calculation:

If current balance $200,000, current rate 6%, new rate 4%, term 30 years, closing costs $3,000:

• Current payment: ~$1,199/month

• New payment: ~$955/month

• Monthly savings: $244/month

• Break-even: $3,000 ÷ $244 = ~12.3 months

• If you stay longer than 12.3 months, refinancing saves money

About Refinance Break-Even Calculator

A refinance break-even calculator helps you determine if refinancing your loan makes financial sense by calculating the break-even point - how long it takes to recoup your closing costs through monthly savings. The break-even point is crucial because refinancing only makes sense if you plan to stay in the home or keep the loan longer than the break-even period. This calculator shows you the break-even point, monthly savings, and net savings to help you make informed refinancing decisions.

When to Use This Calculator

  • Refinance Evaluation: Evaluate if refinancing saves money
  • Break-Even Analysis: Determine break-even point with closing costs
  • Decision Making: Decide if refinancing makes financial sense
  • Timing Analysis: Understand how long to keep the loan

Understanding Break-Even Point

  • Definition: Time to recoup closing costs through monthly savings
  • Calculation: Closing Costs ÷ Monthly Savings
  • Rule of Thumb: Refinance if break-even is less than 2-3 years
  • Stay Duration: Must stay longer than break-even to benefit

Why Use Our Calculator?

  • Break-Even Calculation: See exactly when refinancing pays off
  • Savings Analysis: Understand monthly and total savings
  • Decision Support: Make informed refinancing decisions
  • Cost-Benefit: See if refinancing is worth it
  • 100% Free: No registration or payment required

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a break-even point?

The break-even point is how long it takes to recoup your closing costs through monthly savings from refinancing. For example, if closing costs are $3,000 and you save $250/month, break-even is 12 months. If you'll stay in the home/keep the loan longer than the break-even point, refinancing makes financial sense.

What is a good break-even point?

A good break-even point is typically less than 2-3 years. If break-even is longer than 3 years, refinancing may not be worth it unless you're certain you'll stay in the home/keep the loan for a long time. Shorter break-even points (under 12 months) are ideal and indicate strong refinancing value.

Should I refinance if I'm planning to move soon?

If you're planning to move before the break-even point, refinancing typically doesn't make financial sense because you won't recoup the closing costs. However, if you're moving after the break-even point, refinancing can still save money. Use this calculator to see if the savings period exceeds the break-even point.

Can I avoid closing costs?

Some lenders offer "no-cost" refinancing by either: (1) Rolling closing costs into the loan (increases loan amount), or (2) Increasing the interest rate slightly (lender pays costs but you pay higher rate). "No-cost" refinancing eliminates the break-even calculation but may result in higher total costs over time. Compare total costs carefully.