Welcome to Home Mortgage
California Home Mortgage Article
![]()
This is a selection made from among articles on California Home Mortgage. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.
Refinancing Your Mortgage Can Really Save You Money
from: Chileshe MwapeRefinancing a mortgage is simply taking out a new mortgage. It means paying off one or more old debts by getting a new loan. Sometimes, refinancing your mortgage can really save you money. You may be able to pay less interest, lower your monthly payment, or convert from a 30-year loan to a 15-year loan and build your equity faster. But be sure that refinancing is right for you.
1. Refinancing can be a good idea for you if you:
- want to get out of a high interest rate loan to take advantage of lower rates. This is a good idea only if you intend to stay in the house long enough to make the additional fees worthwhile.
- have an adjustable-rate mortgage and want a fixed-rate loan to have the certainty of knowing exactly what the mortgage payment will be for the life of the loan.
- want to convert to an adjustable-rate mortgage with a lower interest rate or more protective features.
- want to build up equity more quickly by converting to a loan with a shorter term.
- want to draw on the equity built up in your house to get cash for a major purchase or for your children's education.
2. Some situations where refinancing your mortgage can really save you money:
- refinancing your higher interest rate unsecured loans with lower interest rate unsecured loans if the terms of the loans are comparable and the new rate is lower than the existing rate.
- refinancing your secured debts (such as your mortgage or car loan) if the new loan is for the same length of time left on your old loan (or shorter), and the interest rate on the new loan is substantially lower than the interest rate on your existing loan.
- refinancing your home to pay-off expensive car loans or credit cards provided you’re not in financial difficulty and not at risk of losing your home.
Mortgage refinancing can be worthwhile, but it does not make good financial sense for every homeowner. A general role of thumb is that refinancing becomes worth your while if the current interest rate on your mortgage is at least 2 percentage points higher than the prevailing market rate. This figure is generally accepted as the safe margin when balancing the costs of refinancing a mortgage against the savings.
Sometimes, refinancing is an appropriate way to resolve financial problems. In some situations, however, refinancing can make existing financial problems worse. If you decide that refinancing is not worth the costs, ask your lender whether you may be able to obtain all or some of the new terms you want by agreeing to a modification of your existing loan instead of a refinancing.
About the Author
Copyright © 2005. Chileshe Mwape writes for the Mortgage Lender Guide at: http://www.lending-guide.org/ which offers informative articles about mortgages and loans.
This article may be reprinted online as long as all the above link is active and clickable.
California Home Mortgage News
Are you an idiot to keep paying your mortgage? (ABC 15 Phoenix)
Should you keep paying your mortgage? If you have significant equity in your home, absolutely. If you don't, it's getting harder to answer that question, especially when our government keeps giving people who owe more than their homes are worth so many reasons not to pay.
Read more...You can qualify for mortgage, it's just tougher (San Francisco Chronicle)
There is something that mortgage lenders want Bay Area home buyers to know: They are open for business. While it is certainly harder to get a loan today than it was two years ago, lenders say it's far from impossible for would-be borrowers with the right...
Read more...Home sellers suffer amid wave of foreclosures (CNN Money)
Selling a home in this market is hard enough. Competing in a neighborhood flooded with foreclosed homes that are heavily discounted is nearly impossible.
Read more...Dream home detour: I-57 interchange ousts family (Chicago Sun-Times)
At the shiny new house guarded by two concrete lions on a cul-de-sac in Posen, Volare O'Connor saw a place to plant roots. He and his wife bought the home on California Avenue in the south suburb for $265,000 in 2006. They made plans to have a family, starting with their first child last year.
Read more...SoCal Assemblyman Pushes Mortgage Moratorium Plan (CBS 2 Los Angeles)
An assemblyman from the South Bay says he will try again to get the California Legislature to approve a moratorium on mortgage foreclosures, a plan backed by the governor but strongly opposed by the state's banks, it was reported Saturday.
Read more...Feds dropped home-loan crackdown, records show (San Francisco Chronicle)
The Bush administration backed off proposed crackdowns on no-money-down, interest-only mortgages years before the economy collapsed, buckling to pressure from some of the same banks that have now failed. It ignored remarkably prescient warnings that foretold...
Read more...