Every time rates dip, the same headlines reappear: refinance now, save thousands. The pitch is seductive because it isolates one number โ the interest rate โ and ignores the rest. When you actually run the figures with closing costs, reset amortization, and the time you’ll stay in the home, the picture gets murkier. For a meaningful share of borrowers, refinancing is a lateral move dressed up as a win.
Closing costs eat the headline savings
A typical refinance runs 2 to 5 percent of the loan balance in closing costs, according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. On a $300,000 mortgage, that’s $6,000 to $15,000 in fees: origination, appraisal, title, recording, and lender charges. Brokers love to roll those costs into the new loan, which makes them feel free. They aren’t. You’re now financing the fees over thirty years at the new rate, paying interest on the cost of getting the new rate. The break-even point โ the month your cumulative savings exceed the closing costs โ is rarely under three years and often closer to five. If you sell, refinance again, or pay off the loan before that, you’ve handed money to the lender for nothing.
Resetting the clock is the hidden tax
Refinancing usually restarts amortization. If you’re seven years into a thirty-year loan and refinance into another thirty, you’ve added seven years of interest payments to your life. The monthly payment may drop, but the total interest paid over the loan’s life can rise even at a lower rate. Mortgage amortization is front-loaded: the first decade is mostly interest. Refinancing back to year one means you’re paying that interest-heavy phase twice. Lenders rarely highlight this in the savings comparison, because the comparison is monthly, not lifetime. A fairer analysis looks at total interest paid plus closing costs against your existing trajectory. Done that way, many “savings” disappear.
When the math actually works
Refinancing isn’t always a trap. It can make sense when the rate drop is large โ generally a full percentage point or more โ you plan to stay in the home well past the break-even point, and you refinance into an equal or shorter term so you don’t reset the clock. Cash-out refinances to consolidate high-interest debt occasionally pencil out, but they convert unsecured debt into debt secured by your home, which is its own risk. The borrowers who benefit most are those who run a full lifetime-cost model, not just a monthly-payment comparison, and who treat the closing costs as real money rather than a paper transaction.
The bottom line
Refinancing isn’t categorically bad, but the industry pitch is built on the friendliest possible framing. Before signing, calculate your break-even month, compare total interest over the life of both loans, and be honest about how long you’ll stay. If the answer isn’t clearly favorable on all three fronts, the responsible move is often to keep the loan you have.
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