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Here are three signs it might be time to refinance your mortgage


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It’s unclear when the Federal Reserve could begin cutting interest rates, but many homeowners who took out a mortgage in recent years — as rates hovered between 6% and 7%, and even touched 8% — are paying attention for opportunities to refinance.

Thanks to those high mortgage interest rates, refinance activity in 2023 was at the lowest level in 30 years.

In the first and second quarters of 2023 there was only $75 billion and $80 billion, respectively, in mortgage refinance originations nationally, according to Freddie Mac, a government-sponsored entity that buys mortgages from banks.

“Because rates shot up so much over the past few years, refinancing activity has mostly disappeared,” said Jeff Ostrowski, a housing analyst at Bankrate.

As part of its National Financial Literacy Month efforts, CNBC will be featuring stories throughout the month dedicated to helping people manage, grow and protect their money so they can truly live ambitiously.

Refinancing activity rose 2.9% in February compared with last year, Freddie Mac found. However, fewer owners might refinance their loans as they might still be locked in on historically low rates or may see little incentive to do so, the mortgage buyer forecasts.

As homeowners wait to see when Fed rate cuts might materialize, and to what extent, here are three signs it may be smart to refinance:

1. You can cut your rate by 50 basis points or more

The right time to refinance your loan depends on when you bought your house, said Chen Zhao, a senior economist at Redfin, a real estate brokerage site.

It’s typically smart to wait for rates to go down by a full percentage point because it makes a significant difference in your mortgage, experts say.

Yet, once you start seeing rates decline by at least 50 basis points from your current rate, contact your lenders or loan officers and see if it makes sense to refinance, depending on factors including the costs, monthly savings and how long you plan to be in the home, Zhao said.

“There are costs associated with it, but the costs are low in comparison to the savings over the long term,” said Zhao.

While the outlook on Fed rate cuts continues to change, rates are unlikely to go much below 6% in the near term, Zhao said.

“We’re just in a much higher interest rate situation with the economy,” she said.

Don’t hold out for a super low rate like the ones consumers saw in the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic.

“We’ve been so accustomed to mortgage rates as a baseline being at 2% or 3%,” said Veronica Fuentes, a certified financial planner at Northwestern Mutual. “That’s what we expect the norm to be, but that’s actually not the case.”

2. You can pay cash for closing costs

When you refinance, “it’s like doing a brand new loan all over again,” Ostrowski said.

That means you’ll incur closing costs, typically including an appraisal and title insurance.

The total cost will depend on your area or state.

The average closing cost for a refinanced…



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Here are three signs it might be time to refinance your mortgage