If you closed in 2023 or 2024, you probably locked between 7.0% and 7.85%. With rates in 2026 sitting in the low 6s — and possibly heading lower — refi math finally pencils for a lot of you.
This isn't a "you should refinance now!" post. It's the actual math, written by a realtor (not a lender) who watches the local market every week and has zero commission upside if you refi. Here's the real call.
The 1% rule of thumb is wrong
You've probably heard "wait until rates drop 1% before you refi." That rule comes from the 1990s when closing costs were 4-5% of the loan and rates barely moved. In 2026, with closing costs typically 1.5-2% on most loans and lender competition compressing margins, the math is different.
The actual question is: how many months until your savings cover the closing costs?
That number is your break-even. If you'll be in the home longer than your break-even, refi makes sense. If you might sell before then, don't bother.
The real math — example
Let's say you closed in March 2024 on a $700K home with $560K loan at 7.625% (typical of that vintage). Your monthly P&I right now is $3,964.
Today's rate (October 2026): roughly 6.25% on a 30-year fixed.
Option A: Stay put
Keep paying $3,964/month. Total interest over remaining 28 years: about $773K. You're locked in for the long haul.
Option B: Refi to 6.25% on 30-year fixed
- New monthly P&I: $3,449 (about $515/month savings)
- Closing costs: roughly $9,000 (1.6% of loan, typical)
- Break-even: 17 months ($9,000 ÷ $515 = 17.4 months)
- If you stay 5+ years past closing: net savings of $20K+
- If you stay 10+ years: savings exceed $50K
Option C: Refi to 6.25% on 25-year fixed (term reset to 25 years instead of 30)
This is the smart move if you don't need the cash flow relief. New monthly P&I: $3,696. Lower than your current 7.625% payment by ~$268/month, but you also keep your payoff date roughly the same. You skip the "starting the clock over" trap that hurts long-term wealth.
When refinancing is the wrong call
It's a bad call if any of these are true:
- You might sell within 18 months. You won't reach break-even, so you'll lose money on the closing costs even if your monthly payment drops
- Your rate is already 6.25-6.75%. The drop isn't worth the friction unless you have very specific cash-flow needs
- You took out a 5/1 or 7/1 ARM that hasn't reset yet. Run the actual ARM-vs-refi math — the ARM rate might still be lower
- You're in the first 6 months of your mortgage. Many lenders won't refi yet, and if they will, the closing costs are usually higher
- Your home value has dropped. If your new LTV is over 80%, you may have to add PMI back, which eats most of the rate savings
Closing costs — what they actually run
Lenders love to advertise "no-cost refinance!" Translation: they roll the costs into the loan or charge a higher rate. There's no free refi.
Realistic 2026 closing costs on a $560K refi loan in SoCal:
| Cost | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Lender origination + underwriting | $1,500 – $3,500 |
| Appraisal | $650 – $850 |
| Title insurance + escrow | $2,000 – $3,500 |
| Recording fees + courier | $200 – $400 |
| Credit report + verifications | $50 – $100 |
| Prepaid items (taxes, insurance, prepaid interest) | $2,000 – $4,000 |
| Total typical | $6,400 – $12,350 |
Get 3 lender quotes minimum. The spread between cheapest and most expensive on the same loan is often $3K-$5K. Don't just go with whoever sent you a flyer.
Cash-out refi — separate analysis
Cash-out refi is where you borrow more than you owe and pocket the difference. Tempting if you have equity (which most SoCal homeowners do after the 2020-2024 run-up). But:
- Cash-out refis carry a higher rate than rate-and-term refis — typically 0.25-0.50% more
- The first $750K of mortgage interest is tax-deductible — but only if used to "buy, build, or substantially improve" the home. Cashing out for a wedding or to pay credit cards = no deduction
- If you might sell within 5 years, cash-out almost never pencils
HELOC is usually a smarter cash-out vehicle than a refi if your existing first-mortgage rate is good. Don't blow up a 6.25% first to take out cash if a HELOC can get you there.
The lock-vs-float decision
Once you commit to refi, you have to decide when to lock. Lock too early and rates might keep falling. Lock too late and a Fed hawkish surprise can move rates 0.25% overnight.
Practical rule: lock once you're under contract for the new loan and within 30 days of closing. Don't try to time perfect bottoms. The 0.05-0.10% you might gain isn't worth the stress, and most lender locks are 30-60 days anyway.
Three questions before you call a lender
- How long will I realistically stay in this home? If under 18-24 months, skip the refi.
- What's my goal — cash flow or total interest paid? Cash flow → 30-year. Total interest → 25 or 20-year.
- Do I trust my current home value? Pull comps. If your value dropped 10%+ from peak, refi gets harder.
Want a second opinion before you refi?
I work with a small short-list of SoCal lenders I trust to quote honestly. If you want to run your specific numbers — current rate, balance, target rate, closing costs, break-even — happy to do a 15-minute Zoom and walk through it. I don't charge, and I don't make a commission on your refi. I just want SoCal homeowners to make smart calls.
The best refi in 2026 isn't the lowest rate. It's the one with closing costs you can break even on before life changes — job, school district, baby, move.
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