The Truth About No Closing Cost Refinances
When rates drop, many homeowners hear about a “no closing cost refinance.” It sounds like free money—but is it really? Let’s break it down.
What Is a No Closing Cost Refinance?
A no closing cost refinance allows you to refinance your mortgage using lender credits to pay for third-party closing costs. How is this done? Well, in markets where interest rates are heading down, homeowners who may have purchased or refinanced at a higher rate can refinance at a lower rate that has lender credits to cover the closing costs. We are also able to wrap the interest and other fees into the loan, so the borrower pays nothing out of pocket.
Instead of paying thousands at closing, those costs are covered in one of two ways (and usually BOTH):
- Lender Credit – The lender gives you a higher interest rate and uses that extra margin to cover the costs.
- Rolled Into the Loan – The lender adds the closing costs into your new loan balance.
🏡 Mortgage Rates Are a Menu — Not One Number
Most people think there’s just one mortgage rate — but really, rates are shown on a matrix (a pricing sheet lenders use). Each interest rate has a cost or credit attached to it.
- Higher Rate → Lender Credit (the lender gives you money to offset closing costs — this is how “no closing cost” refinances work).
- Lower Rate → You Pay Points (you pay extra upfront — called “discount points” — to buy the rate down and get a lower payment).
💵 Hypothetical Example — $400,000 Loan
(Numbers below are for illustration only — not a rate quote or loan offer)
Rate Option Upfront Cost / Credit What It Means
5.50% $0 (Par Pricing) The “standard” rate — no extra cost or lender credit.
5.75% 1% lender credit (≈$4,000 back). You get about $4,000 to help with closing costs, but pay a bit more each month.
5.25%. 1% cost (≈$4,000) You pay about $4,000 at closing to “buy down” and lower your monthly payment.
💡 Monthly Payment Impact (Approx.)
- 5.75% → about $133 more per month vs 5.25%
- 5.25% → about $133 less per month vs 5.75%
🧮 How People Use This
- Short-term or planning to refinance again → Pick the 5.75% “no-cost” option — you’re not out of cash and can refi if rates drop.
- Long-term home → Consider paying the 1% to drop the rate and save monthly.
The Pros
✅ No big check to write at closing
✅ “Instant” monthly savings
✅ Great for homeowners who want quick savings, knowing if the market drops again, they can do another refinance
The Cons
⚠️ Not the lowest market interest rate
⚠️ Loan balance can increase if costs are rolled in
⚠️ May not be the best long-term solution
Who Should Consider It?
- Homeowners with interest rates about 1% or more above the current market.
- Borrowers who want lower monthly payments without spending money out of pocket.
- Anyone refinancing to drop mortgage insurance or adjust loan terms quickly.
The Bottom Line
“No closing cost” doesn’t mean free—it just means structured differently. The best refinance strategy depends on your financial goals, how long you’ll stay in your home, and the rate environment.
👉 Want to know if a no closing cost refinance makes sense for you? Let’s run the numbers together.
🎥 Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YMi7pNzKlcg
🎧
Listen on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/episode/7giZSM4wIPZUQxLTXuK5CP
Garrick Werdmuller
Independent Mortgage Broker
DRE BRKR 01368202 | NMLS 242952
📞 510.282.5456 | 📠 510.225.0382
✉️
garrick@freshhomeloan.com
🌐 freshhomeloan.com
🏢 1151 Harbor Bay Parkway, Suite 136, Alameda, CA 94502
Socials:
https://www.facebook.com/freshhomeloan/
https://www.instagram.com/garrickwerdmuller/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/garrick-werdmuller-b044253/
https://www.youtube.com/@FreshHomeLoan
#Refinance #Mortgage #RealEstate #MortgageBroker #HomeLoans #Realtor #MortgageLender #LoanOfficer #FirstTimeHomeBuyer #HomeLoan #Finance #MortgageRates #Investment #HomeBuyers #RealEstateAgent #Loans #NewHome #Loan #Home #DreamHome #Property #Mortgages #MortgageTips #HomeOwnership #Lender #Realtors #Lending #Purchase #HomeBuying #Broker








