Negotiating Mortgage Pre-payment Penalties
There are many negotiable parts of the refinance process and over time we will get into all of them. Some of these include, appraisal fees, processing, administrative, origination, broker points, and for today’s topic pre-payment penalties.
Why would the bank care if you payoff the loan early? Isn’t that what they want?
No. The fact is they want you to keep any loan for at least 18 months and in most cases will see a loss if the loan is paid off within 6 months. As a result, the standard contract between lenders and the mortgage brokers include the “chargeback” of any points or rebates the lender paid to the broker for the loan if that loan is prepayed within 6 months.
Any loan can be aquired without a pre-payment penalty. The lender’s rate quote will be based on how long you guarantee to keep the loan. A borrower who wants the flexibility of no prepayment penalty will pay a rate higher than the borrower who will accept a 1, 2, or 3 year committment. The lender charges the higher rate to insure recapture of loan costs and profitablility sooner.
The standard prepayment penalty is 6 months interest. This can vary but 6 months is by far the most common. The prepayment penalty could be considered HARD (due whether you refinance or sell before the minimum period is up), or SOFT (due if you refinance before the minimum period expires but not if you sell). Some are a combination of the 2 (hard for 6 months, soft for the remainder of 2 years). In all cases it is up to you whether you want to accept it. Expect a rate of a half to 1 full percentage point difference to the rate depending on the type of loan. Longer term loans come with a 3 year prepayment penalty by default.
Long term fixed rates are higher than a fixed rate for 5 years. Why get a long term (over 5 year) fixed rate and not accept a 3 year committment to keep the loan? It is contradictive reasoning. If there is any reasonable doubt that you will be in the home for 3 years then you should be choosing a loan with a shorter term fixed period which will match with a shorter prepayment penalty. A 2 year fixed rate has a 2 year prepayment penalty by default. Again, this is negotiable but the rate you are quoted will be a direct result of this choice.
When applying for a loan the prepayment penalty should be disclosed when the rate is quoted, and certainly by the time and Good Faith Estimate is provided (although it will not appear on the GFE). It is not usually in writing on early documentation so be sure to ask when the rate is quoted.
Next week we will be covering all parts of the Good Faith Estimate.
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Regarding 2yr fixed rate with 3 yr prepayment penalty, I heard that in california there’s a law that you have 90 days to refinance your mortgage after 2 yrs. without penalty even though you have 3 yr prepayment penalty. Is this true?