Decision Tool

Refinance Break-even Elite Calculator

Estimate refinance payment change, break-even period, and horizon savings.

Refinance Break-even Elite Calculator

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What this calculator does

This refinance break-even calculator estimates how long it takes monthly savings to recover refinance costs, and how net savings change across different horizons.

How it works

The model computes old and new payment streams, applies upfront refinance costs, and estimates cumulative net savings by horizon.

  1. Enter current balance, current rate, and remaining term.
  2. Enter new rate and new term for the refinance option.
  3. Add closing costs, points, and optional cash-out amount.
  4. Choose whether upfront costs are rolled into the new balance.

Example calculation

Sample scenario:

FAQs

What does break-even mean in a refinance decision?

Break-even is the point where cumulative payment savings equal upfront refinance costs. Before that month, you are still recovering costs. After that month, savings are net positive under your assumptions. It is a timing metric, not a guarantee, and should be checked against your expected hold period.

Can a lower rate still be a bad refinance?

Yes. If costs are high, term resets are long, or you plan to move before break-even, a lower rate may still underperform. This is why payment reduction alone is not enough. You need horizon-based net savings to evaluate whether refinance economics are actually favorable.

How do rolled-in closing costs affect the result?

Rolling costs into the loan can reduce immediate cash outflow, but it raises principal and may increase interest over time. The calculator models this tradeoff directly. Compare rolled and unrolled cases to see whether liquidity benefits justify additional financing cost.

Should I compare interest savings or payment savings?

Use both. Payment savings help with monthly cash flow, while interest savings indicate long-run financing efficiency. A refinance can improve one and weaken the other, especially when term length changes. Horizon comparisons are the best way to avoid one-metric bias.

How often should I re-check refinance break-even?

Re-check whenever rate quotes, fees, or your expected hold period changes. Even small shifts in costs or timeline can move break-even materially. Running updated scenarios before locking terms helps reduce timing risk.

Is this tool enough to choose a lender?

It is a strong screening tool, but final lender comparison should include APR disclosures, escrow requirements, prepayment rules, and all itemized fees. Use this model to shortlist options, then validate contract details before making a final decision.

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Advanced details

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Formula
break_even_months = cost / monthly_savings
Modeling assumptions
  • Rates and payment schedules are assumed stable after refinance.
  • Closing costs and points are treated as upfront modeled costs.
  • Cash-out and rolled costs can increase principal and total interest.
  • Prepayment behavior is not projected unless you model it separately.
Planning guidance

Review monthly payment change, break-even months, and 1/3/5/10-year deltas.

This refinance break-even calculator estimates how long it takes monthly savings to recover refinance costs, and how net savings change across different horizons. It is useful when you are comparing a current mortgage against a new rate and term and need a refinance cost break even view in months, not just payment change. For related analysis, use the Mortgage Payment Calculator, Mortgage Amortization Calculator, and Rent vs Buy Calculator. Use this to decide whether refinancing still makes sense if you might sell or move sooner than planned.

The model computes old and new payment streams, applies upfront refinance costs, and estimates cumulative net savings by horizon.

Extended workflow

  1. Enter current balance, current rate, and remaining term.
  2. Enter new rate and new term for the refinance option.
  3. Add closing costs, points, and optional cash-out amount.
  4. Choose whether upfront costs are rolled into the new balance.
  5. Review monthly payment change, break-even months, and 1/3/5/10-year deltas.

References

Decision outputs are planning projections based on your assumptions and are not financial advice.

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