![]() When "cash-in" refinancing pays offTuesday, September 28, 2010 - Article by: Michael Ivanov -
(MONEY Magazine) -- At the height of the housing boom, millions of Americans treated their houses like ATMs, pulling out money through "cash-out" refis. Today, with millions of mortgages underwater, money is flowing in the opposite direction. Want to refinance at today's low rates? Well, lenders want you to have equity of at least 20%; if you don't, you must add cash to make up the difference. No wonder "cash-in" refis accounted for 22% of all refinancing activity in the second quarter. But is now the time to put money into your home? Here are three cases where cash-ins can pay off -- and three where they won't. When to put cash in Have a jumbo loan but are extremely close to the cutoff for a conforming loan ($417,000 for single-family homes in most markets)? Then toss in enough extra money to get out of jumboland when you refinance. The average fixed rate on a 30-year jumbo is about 5%; rates on a conforming loan are a half percentage point lower. 2. You can avoid PMI: If your loan-to-value ratio is above 80%, you have to shell out for private mortgage insurance, which averages $1,500 a year on a $300,000 loan. But you could avoid having to pay PMI by putting enough cash in so that your LTV ratio falls below 80%. 3. You want to pay off your mortgage faster: Some homeowners are putting cash in so that they can afford the payments when they refinance a 30-year loan into a 20-, 15-, or even 10-year mortgage, says Anthony Hsieh, CEO of online mortgage lender LoanDepot.com. Even with the extra cash, your monthly payments will be higher on a shorter loan. But over the life of the mortgage, the total interest savings can be huge (see the chart). When to hold onto your money |
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