Compare refinance offers side by side to find the best deal for your situation
Homeowners who have received quotes from multiple lenders, anyone trying to find the best refinance offer, and borrowers balancing rate vs. closing cost tradeoffs.
Compare up to three refinance offers side by side — monthly payment, total interest, closing costs, break-even, and net savings — to objectively identify the best deal.
Lender A: 6.0% with $8,000 closing costs vs. Lender B: 6.25% with $2,500 costs — Lender A saves $80/month more but takes 100 months to break even vs. 31 months for Lender B.
Pro Tip: Get at least 3 quotes and request a Loan Estimate from each lender. All mortgage credit inquiries within a 14-45 day window count as a single inquiry on your credit report, so shop aggressively.
Net savings compared to your current mortgage (after closing costs)
Compare refinance offers in 4 simple steps
Input your current mortgage balance, interest rate, and remaining term. You'll find these on your latest mortgage statement or online portal.
Enter each lender's quoted rate, loan term, closing costs, and any discount points. Get these from the Loan Estimate each lender is required to provide.
Review monthly payments, total interest, break-even points, and net savings. The calculator highlights the better deal in green.
See which offer saves more at different time horizons. A lower-cost offer may win short-term while a lower-rate offer wins long-term.
When shopping for a refinance, the lowest interest rate isn't always the best deal. Each lender packages their offer differently — some charge higher closing costs for a lower rate, others offer "no-cost" refinances with slightly higher rates. Without comparing the full picture, you could leave thousands on the table.
This calculator lets you put two offers head-to-head, accounting for rates, fees, points, and your timeline to determine which refinance truly costs less. The break-even analysis shows when each offer starts saving you money, and the timeline view reveals which wins over different time horizons.
What savvy borrowers look for when comparing offers
A 5.99% rate with $8,000 in fees can cost more than 6.25% with $4,000 in fees. Always compare the total cost of each offer including all closing costs and points.
If Offer A breaks even in 18 months and Offer B in 36 months, but you might move in 3 years, Offer A gives you more time to benefit from the savings.
Paying points to buy down your rate is like prepaying interest. It only pays off if you keep the loan long enough. One point on a $300K loan costs $3,000 but saves ~$50/month.
Lenders must provide a standardized Loan Estimate within 3 days of application. Page 3 compares costs over 5 years. Use the same loan amount when requesting quotes for apples-to-apples comparison.
Some lenders offer to cover closing costs by charging a higher rate (0.125-0.5% more). Great if you plan to refinance again or move within 3-5 years when you won't recoup closing costs.
Once you choose an offer, lock the rate immediately. Standard locks are 30-60 days. Ask about "float down" options that let you benefit if rates drop further before closing.
Follow these steps for an effective comparison:
Step 1: Gather standardized quotes
Step 2: Compare these key numbers
Step 3: Calculate break-even for each
Step 4: Negotiate
Interest rate is just one piece of the cost puzzle:
Interest Rate:
APR (Annual Percentage Rate):
Why APR matters for comparison:
It depends entirely on how long you'll keep the loan:
Choose lowest closing costs if:
Choose lowest rate if:
Example comparison:
Get at least 3-5 quotes for the best deal:
Research shows shopping saves money:
Where to get quotes:
Credit score protection:
Points are prepaid interest that lower your rate:
How points work:
Points are worth it if:
Points are NOT worth it if:
Negative points (lender credits):
A no-closing-cost refi trades upfront fees for a higher rate:
How it works:
Example comparison on $300K loan:
Choose no-cost refi if:
Choose standard refi if:
Tools that work well with this calculator