Refinance vs. Wait Calculator
Should you refinance now or wait for lower rates? Compare immediate savings against the potential benefits of waiting, factoring in closing costs and break-even timelines.
"Cost of Waiting" = extra interest paid this year by not refinancing now at today's available rate.
How to Use the Refinance vs. Wait Calculator
In under two minutes you’ll see whether refinancing now or waiting for a lower rate puts more money back in your pocket — and exactly how many months it takes to recoup closing costs under each scenario.
Enter Your Current Mortgage Details
Input your current loan balance, current interest rate, and current monthly principal & interest payment. If you leave the P&I field blank, the calculator auto-computes it from your balance and rate. These numbers are the baseline both scenarios are measured against — use your most recent mortgage statement for accuracy.
Set the Rate & Closing Costs for Scenario A (Refi Now)
Enter the rate a lender is offering you today and the estimated closing costs for that refinance. Closing costs typically run 2%–5% of the loan balance — use a real lender quote for the most accurate results. The calculator immediately shows your new payment, monthly savings, and the break-even month at which those savings fully cover the closing cost outlay.
Enter Your Projected Rate for Scenario B (Wait 1 Year)
Input your estimate of where 30-year fixed rates will be in 12 months. This is necessarily an assumption — try your base case first, then re-run at 0.25% higher and lower to stress-test the decision. The calculator shows the full cost of waiting (extra interest paid this year) and whether the future lower rate produces enough additional savings to justify it over 3 and 5 years.
Read the Recommendation & Download Your Report
The results card highlights which scenario wins over 3 years and explains why. Charts show cumulative net savings for both paths across 5 years and a break-even comparison bar. Download the PDF report to share with your spouse, financial advisor, or lender — it includes a full side-by-side comparison table with 1, 2, 3, and 5-year net savings for both scenarios.
What This Calculator Shows You
Most refinance calculators only show your new payment and a simple break-even month. This tool models both paths simultaneously — including the often-ignored cost of waiting — so you see the true trade-off, not just half of it.
New Monthly Payment & Monthly Savings (Both Scenarios)
For each scenario the calculator computes a new payment on a fresh 30-year amortization of your current balance and shows the monthly dollar savings versus your current payment. These are the headline numbers — but the real comparison happens in the net savings cards below them, which account for closing costs and the cost of waiting.
Break-Even Point (Months to Recoup Closing Costs)
The exact number of months until your cumulative savings surpass the closing costs you paid upfront. This is your single most important decision metric: if you plan to sell or refinance again before the break-even, the refinance produces a net loss. The calculator shows break-even for Scenario A immediately, and for Scenario B starting from the refinance date in year two.
Cost of Waiting (12-Month Foregone Savings)
The dollar amount you give up by staying on your current rate for another year instead of refinancing today. This is calculated as: monthly savings available now × 12. Even when rates are expected to fall, this foregone year of savings is a real cost that Scenario B must overcome. The calculator makes this number explicit — a figure most refinance tools hide entirely.
Net Savings at 1, 2, 3, and 5 Years (Both Scenarios)
Cumulative net savings for each scenario at four time horizons — after deducting closing costs and, for Scenario B, the cost of waiting. These summary cards give you an instant read of which scenario wins at each timeframe. The winning scenario’s 3-year figure is displayed as the hero number at the top of the results panel.
Cumulative Savings Line Chart (5 Years)
A dual-line chart tracking net cumulative savings for both scenarios from today through year five. The “Refi Now” line starts negative (closing costs paid upfront) and climbs steadily. The “Wait” line stays flat in year one, then rises more steeply in years two through five. Where the lines cross — if they do — is the tipping point that determines which scenario wins over your planned hold period.
Break-Even Bar Chart & PDF Comparison Report
A bar chart puts closing costs, first-year savings from Scenario A, and first-year savings from Scenario B side-by-side so you immediately see how quickly each scenario recoups its cost. The downloadable PDF report contains the full side-by-side comparison table, all net savings figures, the recommendation, and a six-card summary grid — formatted for sharing with a lender or financial advisor.
Refinancing in Numbers
Three Homeowners Who Need This Calculator
The right refinance decision depends entirely on your rate, your timeline, and your confidence in future rate direction. These three profiles show when refinancing now wins, when waiting wins, and when the answer is genuinely uncertain.
You bought or last refinanced when rates were at 7%–8% and today’s available rate is meaningfully lower. Your break-even is well under 24 months and you plan to stay in the home for at least five years. In this scenario, waiting is almost always a mistake — even if rates fall further in 12 months, the savings you forgo while waiting are a guaranteed cost you cannot recover. Use the calculator to confirm how far rates would need to fall to make waiting worthwhile, then decide whether that outcome is realistic.
- Run Scenario B with your future rate 0.25%, 0.5%, and 0.75% lower than today — note how large the gap must be before waiting wins at 3 years
- If your break-even is under 18 months, the case for refinancing now is very strong regardless of the rate outlook
- Get at least two lender quotes before entering closing costs — variation can be $2,000–$4,000 and dramatically changes the break-even
You have a rate around 6.5%–7% and rates today are in the 6%–6.5% range. Your projected future rate is 5.5%–6%. The difference between refinancing now versus waiting is smaller, the cost of waiting is a real drag, and the answer depends heavily on how confident you are in the rate projection. This is exactly the scenario this calculator is built for — run both cases, stress-test the future rate assumption, and let the 3-year and 5-year net savings numbers make the call rather than your intuition.
- Use the calculator’s range sliders to sweep the future rate assumption — observe the exact rate needed for waiting to produce better 3-year outcomes
- Remember that rate forecasts have a poor track record beyond 6 months — weight the ‘cost of waiting’ as a certain loss against an uncertain future gain
- If you refinance now and rates drop further, you can always refinance again — calculate whether a second refinance later still wins on net
You plan to sell or move within 3–5 years. Whether refinancing makes sense at all — now or later — hinges entirely on whether you’ll reach the break-even point before you sell. If your break-even is 30 months and you’re selling in 36, the savings are thin. If your break-even is 12 months and you have 5 years, the case is clear. Use the calculator to find the break-even for Scenario A, then compare it honestly against your actual timeline before paying thousands in closing costs.
- The 1-year and 2-year net savings cards in the results are your most relevant figures — not the 5-year totals
- Consider a no-closing-cost refinance if your planned hold is under 3 years — enter $0 in the closing costs field to model this scenario
- For Scenario B, check whether a waiting strategy leaves you too close to your sale date to ever recoup costs from year 2 onward
7 Things Every Homeowner Should Know Before Refinancing
A refinance can save you tens of thousands of dollars — or cost you money if you do it at the wrong time or without understanding the full picture. These tips will help you use the calculator correctly and avoid the most common refinance mistakes.
The Break-Even Period Is the Most Important Number in Any Refinance Decision
Monthly savings are only meaningful if you live in the home long enough to collect them. Break-even = closing costs ÷ monthly savings. If your break-even is 22 months and you plan to sell in 18, the refinance is a guaranteed net loss — even if the rate looks attractive. Always calculate break-even before comparing rates, and be brutally honest about your expected hold period. The calculator shows break-even for both scenarios so you can see where each path crosses into net positive territory.
Refinancing Into a New 30-Year Term Resets Your Payoff Clock — and Your Total Interest Cost
When you refinance your existing balance into a fresh 30-year mortgage, your monthly payment drops — but you restart the clock. If you were 7 years into a 30-year loan, you’ve gone from owing 23 years to owing 30 years again. Even at a lower rate, the extended term can mean paying more total interest over the life of the loan. This calculator focuses on cash-flow savings, not total interest cost. If you’re more than 8–10 years into your current loan, run the numbers on a 20- or 15-year term instead before committing to a 30-year refi.
Your Credit Score at the Time of Application Determines Your Rate — Not Your Score When You Bought
Refinance rates are set at origination based on your current credit profile. If your score has improved since you first got your mortgage, you may qualify for a materially better rate than today’s quote suggests. Conversely, if you’ve taken on more debt or had late payments, your rate may be higher than expected. Pull your credit report before lender shopping, dispute any errors, and if your score is below 720, calculate whether 60–90 days of credit improvement would produce a meaningfully lower rate and a better break-even outcome.
Get Loan Estimates from at Least Three Lenders Before Entering Numbers Into Any Calculator
The closing cost input in this calculator only produces accurate results if your closing cost figure is accurate. Lender closing costs vary by $2,000–$5,000 for the same loan — a difference that can move your break-even by 6–12 months. Obtain official Loan Estimates (LE) from at least three lenders before modelling your decision. The LE is a standardized federal document — line items are directly comparable across lenders, unlike verbal quotes or online estimates, which routinely understate costs.
A No-Closing-Cost Refinance Eliminates the Break-Even Problem — But Has Its Own Trade-Offs
Many lenders offer refinances with zero out-of-pocket closing costs by rolling costs into the loan balance or taking a slightly higher rate. Enter $0 in the closing costs field to model this scenario. With no closing costs, the break-even is immediate — every month of savings is pure gain. The trade-off is a marginally higher rate (typically 0.125%–0.25%) or a slightly larger loan balance. For homeowners who plan to sell within 3 years or who may refinance again if rates fall further, a no-closing-cost refinance is often the financially superior choice.
Rates Can Rise While You Wait — Price In the Risk, Not Just the Upside
The “wait for lower rates” strategy is an implicit bet on rate direction. Rates are notoriously difficult to predict — the Federal Reserve, major bank economists, and interest-rate futures markets all frequently miss rate moves by 0.5%–1% or more over a 12-month horizon. When using this calculator, always run Scenario B at your projected rate and at a rate 0.5% higher than today’s available rate. If the “wait” scenario still wins at the higher rate, waiting is a robust decision. If it only wins at your best-case projection, you’re taking on meaningful rate risk that the monthly savings may not justify.
Download the PDF Report and Review It With Your Lender Before Locking a Rate
The PDF generated by this calculator gives you a clear, printable summary of both scenarios — new payments, monthly savings, break-even, cost of waiting, and net savings at 1, 2, 3, and 5 years. Bring it to your lender conversation. It establishes the exact rate the “Refi Now” scenario needs to justify closing costs given your timeline, and it makes explicit what future rate reduction Scenario B requires to beat it. A lender who sees you’ve done this analysis is more likely to sharpen their offer — and you’re far less likely to accept terms that don’t serve your financial goals.
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about how this calculator works, what assumptions it makes, and how to interpret the results to make a confident refinance decision.
Disclaimer: All results produced by the Refinance vs. Wait Calculator are estimates for educational and planning purposes only. This calculator models both refinance scenarios on a fresh 30-year amortization of the current loan balance and does not account for loan-to-value restrictions, lender-specific qualification requirements, tax implications of mortgage interest, mid-term rate changes, or home value appreciation. The “projected future rate” is a user-supplied estimate — actual future rates may differ materially from any projection. Closing cost figures used in calculations are estimates only; actual costs will vary by lender, state, and loan type. The calculator’s recommendation is generated algorithmically based on 3-year net savings and does not constitute financial advice. Always obtain official Loan Estimates from licensed lenders and consult a licensed mortgage professional or financial advisor before making any refinance decision.
