Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are waiting until it goes below 6
what is your current rate? so you would refinance at, say, 5.8?
we initially planned to wait till 5.0. but our monthly payment is huge.
My rate is 6.5% from last year. It's not worth the thousands of dollars for us to refinance until it goes down to at least 5.5%. Our mortgage is also $600K.
We are in the same boat. 6.5 rate on just north of 600K. When do folks predict that'll be worth refinancing? We have a 30 year and want to stay in the house for a while but not forever.
Anonymous wrote:I’m waiting to refi a 6.125% to a 5.25% or so. I think that will happen after the November Fed cut. This would be for a jumbo loan. How common are 20 year loans? 15 years would be very tight and I’ll have two kids in college in 6 years but 20 year may be doable.
Anonymous wrote:is it possible to refinance without restarting the clock? can you refinance for, say, 13.5 years?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Mortgage rates are based on the 10-year treasury. At this point, the 10-year has baked in several rate decreases already, so not sure it will move much when the Fed lowers rates.
^ As an employee of a large mortgage provider, this is the correct answer. Also, almost done refinancing a 30y from 6.99% to 6.125% with no points. So, you are due up for a much improved rate if you are sticking with a 15y right now.
what about increase in timing and increase in loan balance for refi?
Anonymous wrote:Our rate is 4.25% from 2022. Will we ever be able to refinance?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:is it possible to refinance without restarting the clock? can you refinance for, say, 13.5 years?
No
Anonymous wrote:is it possible to refinance without restarting the clock? can you refinance for, say, 13.5 years?
Anonymous wrote:No one can answer this for you. What is the cost of the refi (even no cost refis have costs, either in a higher rate or in fees that are lumped into the new loan) and how much will the new rate save per month. Then calculate how many months at the new rate will it take you to break even on the refi fees.
It’s simple math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Mortgage rates are based on the 10-year treasury. At this point, the 10-year has baked in several rate decreases already, so not sure it will move much when the Fed lowers rates.
^ As an employee of a large mortgage provider, this is the correct answer. Also, almost done refinancing a 30y from 6.99% to 6.125% with no points. So, you are due up for a much improved rate if you are sticking with a 15y right now.
what about increase in timing and increase in loan balance for refi?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are waiting until it goes below 6
what is your current rate? so you would refinance at, say, 5.8?
we initially planned to wait till 5.0. but our monthly payment is huge.
My rate is 6.5% from last year. It's not worth the thousands of dollars for us to refinance until it goes down to at least 5.5%. Our mortgage is also $600K.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are waiting until it goes below 6
what is your current rate? so you would refinance at, say, 5.8?
we initially planned to wait till 5.0. but our monthly payment is huge.