Cash-Out Refinance Break-Even Timeline Tool
Cash-out refinancing has significant closing costs (2-5% of loan amount). Understanding your break-even timeline helps you decide if refinancing makes sense for your situation.
What Is Refinance Break-Even?
Break-even is the point when your monthly savings from refinancing equal the closing costs.
After break-even, you’re truly saving money. Before break-even, you’re still “paying off” the refinance costs.
How Break-Even Works
Example Scenario:
- Current mortgage: $300,000 at 7.5% = $2,097/month
- Refinance to: $350,000 at 6.5% = $2,212/month
- Monthly difference: +$115/month (higher payment)
In this case, there’s no break-even because the refinance increases monthly costs due to:
- Larger loan amount
- Term reset (back to 30 years)
When Refinance Has a Break-Even
Refinance break-even typically occurs when:
- New rate is significantly lower than current rate
- OR new rate is similar to current rate but you’re extending term
Positive Example:
- Current: $300,000 at 7.5% (25 years left) = $2,254/month
- Refinance: $350,000 at 6.5% (30 years) = $2,212/month
- Monthly savings: $42/month
- Closing costs: $12,000
- Break-even: $12,000 ÷ $42 = 285 months (24 years)
This shows why cash-out refinance often doesn’t make sense purely for break-even reasons.
Our Calculator Shows Real Break-Even
Unlike simple calculators, our tool shows:
- Monthly payment comparison - HELOC vs refinance
- True break-even - accounting for combined payments
- Term reset impact - how starting over affects total interest
- 10-year cost comparison - which is cheaper over a decade
What Break-Even Should You Target?
Safe target: Break-even within 3-5 years
- If you might move sooner, HELOC is usually better
- If you’ll stay 10+ years, refinance may win long-term
Use Our Calculator
Enter your numbers to see:
- Exact break-even in months
- Which option saves money over 10 years
- Stress test for rate changes
- LTV and qualification analysis