Time in House Affects Which Decisions?
June 23, 2003
"Am I correct that it doesn’t pay to refinance if I have only had my
house a year? And it doesn’t pay to make extra payments to principal
when I expect to sell in 2 years?"
Wrong on both counts!
The refinance decision, if made rationally, has nothing to do with how
long you have had your house and mortgage. What matters is the interest
rate on the old loan relative to the rate on the new loan, the balance
on the old loan, the cost of the new loan, and how long you expect to
hold the new mortgage. How long you have already held it doesn’t matter.
Expectations about future tenure are important because a refinance
trades off a lower interest rate, the benefit from which grows over
time, against the upfront costs of the refinance. The period over which
the benefits just equal the costs is the "break-even period." If you
don’t hold the new loan that long, the refinance is a loser. You can
find the break-even period on any proposed refinance using calculators
3a, 3b, 3c and 3d.
The decision to make extra payments to principal, in contrast, is
affected neither by how long you have been in the house already, or how
long you expect to hold it in the future. When you make extra payments
to principal, you are reducing your debt and increasing your equity in
the house. You will realize this benefit when you sell, regardless of
when this happens.
For example, let’s assume you pay an additional $100 in principal on May
1 and you sell the house on May 15. Then the amount you net at the sale
will be higher than it would have been had you not made the extra
payment. The difference will be $100 plus the interest on $100 for 15
days, which you would otherwise have had to pay.