4 Important Questions to Ask Before Refinancing Your Mortgage

May 12, 2008 by Christina Lemmey 

Welcome Moms! Please register as a user and feel free to submit your posts and comments often! We are link friendly and super excited about what you have to say!

Thinking of refinancing your home mortgage can seem overwhelming, with so many options on the market. If you break your thought processes into four categories it will be a whole lot easier for you to focus: Think about the term of your mortgage, your current interest rate compared to the new rates on offer, are you staying put or planning to move in the short term future, and do you have enough credit to find a mortgagee happy to take over your loan?

The mortgage term is how long the loan is spread over, and then there is the payback period meaning how long will you be with the new financier before you have made back to money it cost for the refinancing. These costs include appraisal fees, bank fees, lawyer fees and early pay out fees assigned to your current mortgage. Some lending institutes will allow you to absorb those charges associated with transferring into your home mortgage so you don’t pay anything in cash at the time.

Probably the most important thing for you to understand is exactly how much your interest rate will go down. If the new rate is over two percent less than the old one, refinancing is probably going to be worth your while. Any less than that and the recovery period or payback time will be too long and will result in more of a loss to you.

For those people who are hoping to move home in two years or less refinancing beforehand is not a good idea. The refinancing costs for doing the mortgage twice over will be too high leaving you noticeably behind.

Lenders looking to refinance your loan for you are focused on the LTV or loan-to-value ratio. This means the amount of your mortgage in comparison to your home’s appraised value. In some cases the mortgagee will only refinance if the new loan is to be 90% or less of the homes value, but every bank and lender has their own LTV limits. In some cases simply paying refinancing costs yourself will give you a better LTV.

If you do your research, refinancing your home mortgage can save you thousands in interest, but it can lose you the same if you don’t do it right. Check if you know someone who can recommend a lender to refinance with, or take time to see a variety of different ones and make your own informed decision.

For more information visit Mortgage Refinancing Expert, a popular website that offers information on Mortgage Refinancing.


Comments

Feel free to leave a comment...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!





Mom's Talk Network Blogs Work at Home Moms Home & Biz Resources Favorite Resources
Mom's Resource Blog
Family Foodies
Work at Home Moms
Profitable Mommy Blogging
Mom's Talk Radio
Work at Home Idea Vault
Mom Masterminds
Mom's Talk Affiliates
WAHM Advertising
USAWAHM Directory
Mom's Talk eBooks
Mom's Talk Biz
Blog Evangelists
MomWebs Hosting
Easy Internet Survey
Blog Energizer
All Private Label Content

Copyright MomsTalkNetwork.com 2006-8, All Rights Reserved About Us