Artfoliophoto/ Getty Images; Illustration by Austin Courregé/Bankrate
Key takeaways
- Mortgage recasting allows you to pay a lump sum toward your mortgage in order to reduce your remaining monthly payments and interest.
- When you recast your mortgage, you’ll keep the same interest rate and term.
- Recasting might be simpler and cheaper than refinancing, depending on how much you pay in the lump sum.
A mortgage recast involves paying a large sum toward your principal balance in an effort to reduce your monthly payments. After applying the extra money to the principal, your lender will reamortize the new balance over the remaining years on your loan. Mortgage recasting can be a good strategy if you’re interested in making your monthly payments more affordable but don’t want to refinance.
What is a mortgage recast?
Mortgage recasting is a form of prepaying your mortgage. To recast your loan, you’ll make a lump-sum payment toward the principal balance. Your lender will then reamortize the loan with the smaller balance and new, lower monthly payments. Although your loan has been recast, you’ll retain the same interest rate and loan term.
Not all types of mortgages qualify for recasting in the standard sense. You can’t typically recast an FHA loan, VA loan or USDA loan — although your lender might use the recasting method to modify your loan if you’re struggling to pay.
Your lender might require you to reduce your balance by a minimum amount in order to recast it. Most, if not all, lenders require you to be in good standing with payments.
Mortgage recasting vs. refinancing
There’s a big difference between recasting a mortgage and refinancing one, even though both can help you save money. Here’s how they compare:
- Refinancing a mortgage: Refinancing requires that you apply for a brand-new mortgage and pay closing costs. The new loan pays off your existing loan, giving you a new mortgage with a new interest rate. Borrowers typically refinance to get a lower interest rate, go from an adjustable-rate mortgage to a fixed-rate mortgage or do a cash-out refinance of some of the equity in their home.
- Recasting a mortgage: Recasting allows you to keep your existing loan, but adjusts the amortization. You can’t get a lower interest rate or a shorter loan term with recasting, but if your interest rate is already low — or at least lower than prevailing rates — then you lose much of the advantage of refinancing. In that case, a loan recast might be preferable to a refinance because it allows you to keep your current rate.
Should you recast or refinance your mortgage?
Generally, mortgage recasting is best for homeowners who want to keep their current interest rate and have the cash to make a substantial lump-sum payment. If you want to get a lower rate, take cash out of your equity or both, refinancing is the better route.
Mortgage recasting vs. making principal payments
Mortgage recasting differs from simply making principal payments mainly because the former reamortizes your loan. When you make extra principal payments, you’re chipping away at your loan balance, but on your original amortization schedule. These extra principal payments likely aren’t as large as the lump sum you’d pay to recast your loan, either. You can use Bankrate’s mortgage payoff calculator to see how making extra payments can impact your loan.
Should you recast or make extra principal payments?
How does recasting a mortgage work?
Recasting your mortgage doesn’t mean you’ll pay your mortgage off early. Your new payoff schedule matches what it would have been originally but with each monthly payment adjusted to reflect the new balance.
Unlike making extra mortgage payments, recasting your mortgage involves:
- Contacting your service to determine eligibiity
- Completing paperwork
- Making a lump-sum payment and paying the recast fee
How to qualify for mortgage recasting
You’ll need to meet certain qualifications to be eligible to recast your mortgage. These include:
- You can’t have a government-backed loan. You can’t recast an FHA, VA or USDA loan.
- You must meet minimum principal reduction requirements. Most lenders require a minimum lump sum in order to recast the loan.
- You might need to meet an equity requirement: Your lender might require a certain amount of equity in your home to qualify.
- Your loan must be in good standing. Typically, lenders will recast your loan only if you have a history of making payments on time.
How to calculate your mortgage recast
You can estimate your new monthly payment after the recast with the help of our amortization schedule calculator.
Say, for example, your 30-year mortgage carries a balance of $200,000 at a 5 percent interest rate. The monthly payment is $1,074 (excluding escrow payments).
After 10 years, your outstanding mortgage balance is $162,684. You then decide to make a $50,000 lump sum payment to recast the loan, plus pay a $250 recasting fee. That reduces the balance of your loan to $112,684. Your monthly payment for the next 20 years will drop to $744, which is $330 less than your original payment.
Number of years into mortgage term | Amount spent without recasting | Balance left without recasting | Amount spent with recasting after 10 years | Balance left with recasting after 10 years |
---|---|---|---|---|
10 years | $128,880 | $162,684 | $179,130 | $112,684 |
15 years | $193,320 | $135,768 | $223,770 | $94,040 |
20 years | $257,760 | $101,225 | $268,410 | $70,114 |
30 years | $386,640 | $0 | $357,690 | $0 |
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