Anonymous wrote:also when you refi you can deduct more on your mortgage because the interest gets paid up front.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because nothing's free. They just roll the closing costs in with the rest of the loan.
There is a big difference between rolling the closing costs into the loan and a true no cost refi. Yes nothing is free, but if the choice is between, say, a 3% mortgage with a $3,000 credit for the borrower towards closing and 2.875% mortgage with $3000 in closing costs paid by the borrower, I think the smart money takes the 3% mortgage. There is a point--maybe around 10-15 years where the lower rate mortgage would pay off, but most of us either refinance or move within those 10-15 years.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on how long you are planning to stay put. You will need some time to recoup your closing costs for a refi. Also, it resets your mortgage to another 30 or 15 years or whatever your refi is for.
Anonymous wrote:Because nothing's free. They just roll the closing costs in with the rest of the loan.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't do the no cost ones. It's usually a pretty awful deal. You save $2,000 but pay 5 times that over 30 years. It all depends how long you plan on staying in your current home. Post that, and your loan amount, and its simple math for us to tell you