Privacy-first refinance math

Does refinancing make sense today?

Find the break-even month, target rate, true savings, and whether a lower payment is actually saving money.

Your loan

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Cumulative results by year

Year Current payments Refi payments Difference Current balance Refi balance Cumulative savings
Advanced simulations

Target savings

Break even by month

Closing cost sensitivity

Stay-or-move

Invest monthly savings

YearInvestedInvestment valueCosts remainingNet advantage
Market returns are assumptions, not promises.

Cash-in refinance

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How mortgage interest works

Why early mortgage payments are mostly interest

A mortgage is usually amortized: each payment covers interest on the remaining balance plus some principal. Early on, the balance is high, so the interest slice is large. Later, more of each payment reduces the loan.

Why refinancing can lower your payment

A refinance can lower payment through a lower rate, a longer term, a principal reduction, or rolled-in costs. A lower payment is not automatically a lower total cost, especially when a 26-year remaining loan becomes a new 30-year loan.

How lenders still make money

Lenders may earn origination fees, closing costs, servicing income, interest over time, or sell the loan. A lower rate for you can still be a profitable new loan for them.

Why refinancing can be good for both sides

Borrowers can win when interest savings and cash-flow benefits beat closing costs and term reset. Lenders can win by creating, retaining, selling, or servicing a new loan.

Refinancing is not automatically good or bad. The question is whether the savings beat closing costs, term reset, and your expected time with the loan.