Sit down at a closing table and the loan officer will probably show you a chart: pay points upfront, lower your rate, save thousands over the life of the loan. The presentation is designed to make declining points feel like leaving money on the table. The math behind it is real โ but it’s also conditional on assumptions that don’t hold for most buyers, and the conditions are exactly the ones the chart doesn’t emphasize.
The breakeven math depends on staying long enough
A discount point typically costs 1% of the loan amount and reduces the rate by 0.25% โ though the ratio varies by lender and market. On a $400,000 mortgage, that’s $4,000 upfront for a rate cut that might save $60-80 a month. The breakeven point is typically 4 to 7 years. The chart usually highlights the 30-year savings, which look impressive. What the chart doesn’t say is that the median U.S. homeowner sells, refinances, or otherwise terminates their original mortgage in roughly 7 to 10 years, and a meaningful share do so within 5. If you exit before breakeven, you’ve paid for a benefit you didn’t fully receive. The savings only materialize for buyers who stay put through the full amortization or close to it.
Refinancing risk eats a lot of the upside
Mortgage rates fluctuate. If rates fall meaningfully after you buy, you’ll likely refinance โ and the points you paid on the original loan are sunk costs. The new loan starts the math over, often with new points. Buyers who paid points and then refinanced within a few years have, in effect, paid twice for rate reductions and captured the benefit of neither. Historical data on refinance activity shows that during low-rate environments, a substantial portion of recent purchase mortgages get refinanced within the first 3 years. The breakeven calculation rarely accounts for this realistically; it assumes you’ll hold the original loan to maturity, which is the unusual case rather than the typical one.
The opportunity cost of the upfront cash is real
The $4,000 you’d spend on a point isn’t free money. If you’re a buyer with limited liquid reserves, that cash has alternate uses: emergency fund, closing costs, immediate repairs, furniture, or simply not being house-poor in month one. Even for cash-rich buyers, $4,000 invested in a tax-advantaged account at historical equity returns produces meaningfully more wealth over 20-30 years than the rate savings on a mortgage that statistically won’t last that long. The points pitch implicitly assumes that the alternative use of the cash is nothing โ that it would otherwise sit idle. For most buyers in most situations, that’s not the right comparison.
The bottom line
Discount points can make sense for a specific buyer profile: long expected tenure, no foreseeable refinance, limited investment alternatives, and certainty about the rate environment. That profile describes a small minority of homebuyers. For everyone else, the chart at the closing table is optimized for the lender’s revenue, not your outcome. Run the breakeven math with realistic assumptions about how long you’ll keep the loan, and you’ll usually find the answer is to skip the points and keep the cash.
Leave a Reply