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Conventional Refinance • Rate/Term • PMI Strategy

Conventional Refinance: Lower Your Rate or Remove PMI

A conventional refinance replaces your current mortgage with a new conventional loan—commonly to lower your rate, change your term, remove mortgage insurance (PMI) when eligible, or switch from an adjustable rate to a fixed rate. We’ll compare scenarios and show you the cleanest path based on payment, total cost, and break-even. No pressure. No credit check unless you choose to proceed.

No obligation. No credit check unless you choose to proceed.

  • Lower rate / payment
    See scenarios side-by-side before you decide.
  • PMI removal strategy
    When equity and guidelines support it.
  • Break-even clarity
    Know the timeline for costs vs savings.

Quick strategy Want to see if a conventional refinance makes sense for your goals? We’ll price scenarios and show break-even in plain English.

No obligation. No credit check unless you choose to proceed.


What Is a Conventional Refinance?

A conventional refinance is a new mortgage (non-government) that replaces your existing loan. Most conventional refinances are rate-and-term refinances—meaning the goal is to improve the interest rate, change the loan term, or adjust the loan structure (like moving from ARM to fixed) without taking meaningful cash out.

If your goal is to access equity as cash, you’ll typically want a different structure. See Cash-Out Refinance.

Why Homeowners Refinance Conventionally

  • Lower interest rate: reduce payment or cut long-term interest.
  • Change loan term: shorten term to pay off faster or extend for payment relief.
  • Remove PMI: when equity/value and guidelines support it.
  • Switch ARM to fixed: lock in payment stability.
  • Consolidate second liens: combine loans to simplify payments (scenario-dependent).

Rate/Term vs Cash-Out (Which Do You Need?)

Rate/term refinance is best when you want a better rate, a different term, or a lower payment—without taking meaningful cash out. Cash-out refinance is best when you need a lump sum from equity for renovations, debt payoff, or reserves.

Not sure which is best? Start at the Refinance Hub and we’ll compare both paths side-by-side.

Credit, Income, and Approval Factors (Plain English)

Conventional refinance approvals typically depend on the full borrower profile: credit history, income stability, debt-to-income, and your equity position (loan-to-value). In many cases, stronger credit and lower LTV can improve pricing and simplify the file.

  • Credit: score, history, and overall risk
  • DTI: monthly obligations vs income
  • Equity/LTV: impacts eligibility and rate
  • Income: W-2, 1099, self-employed (documentation varies)
  • Assets: bank statements, reserves, and large deposits (if any)

Closing Costs + Break-Even (The Key Decision)

Refinancing usually includes third-party costs (appraisal, title, escrow) plus lender costs. The best way to decide is to compare monthly savings to total costs and find your break-even point.

  • Example: Save $250/month and total costs are $5,000 → break-even is about 20 months.
  • Rule of thumb: If you plan to keep the home longer than break-even, refinancing often makes sense.

Documentation Checklist (Typical)

  • Mortgage statement (and/or payoff information)
  • Two most recent pay stubs + 2 years W-2s (or self-employed documentation)
  • Two months bank statements (all pages)
  • Photo ID
  • Homeowners insurance information
  • Explanation for any large deposits (if applicable)

How the Process Works

  1. Quote + strategy: run scenarios (payment, term, cost) based on your goal.
  2. Docs once: collect clean documents up front to reduce conditions.
  3. Appraisal + underwriting: keep the file moving with clear communication.
  4. Clear to close: sign, fund, and your new loan replaces your old one.

Start a Free Conventional Refinance Review

We’ll compare rate/term scenarios and PMI strategy (if applicable), then show break-even so you can decide with confidence. No obligation. No credit check unless you choose to proceed.

I agree to be contacted regarding financing options. No credit check will occur unless I choose to proceed.

No obligation. No credit check unless you choose to proceed.


Conventional Refinance FAQs

How do I know if refinancing is worth it?
We calculate your break-even by comparing monthly savings to total closing costs. If you plan to keep the home beyond that break-even, refinancing often makes sense. We’ll show you the numbers clearly before you decide.
Can a conventional refinance remove PMI?
In many cases, yes—depending on equity, property value, and guideline requirements. We’ll review your scenario and run options to see if PMI removal is possible as part of your refinance strategy.
Do I need an appraisal for a conventional refinance?
Many conventional refinances require an appraisal, but appraisal waivers are sometimes available depending on eligibility and property data. We’ll plan for the likely path so your timeline stays predictable.
Is a conventional refinance better than FHA or VA?
It depends. Conventional can be great for strong credit and equity (especially PMI removal and rate/term improvements). FHA or VA may be a better fit in certain scenarios based on guidelines and pricing. We’ll compare the best fit for your situation.

Licensed in AZ, CO, and FL. Not all products are available in all states. No obligation. No credit check unless you choose to proceed.

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