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Rate-and-Term vs Cash-Out Refinance: Key Differences Explained

Understand the differences between rate-and-term and cash-out refinancing. LTV limits, rate differences, and best use cases from a CA broker's perspective.

Bill McCoy
Updated 3/20/2026
9 min read

Rate-and-Term vs Cash-Out Refinance: Key Differences Explained

When you refinance, you're choosing between two fundamentally different paths: change your rate and term, or pull cash out of your home. The one you pick determines your rate, your closing costs, and how much equity you keep.

After 15 years brokering mortgages in California, I can tell you this decision trips people up more than it should. Let me clear up the confusion with real numbers and examples.

What's a Rate-and-Term Refinance?

This is the "standard" refinance. You're replacing your existing mortgage with a new one to:

  • Lower your interest rate
  • Change your loan term (30-year to 15-year, or vice versa)
  • Switch loan types (ARM to fixed, FHA to conventional, etc.)

Key point: Your new loan amount is roughly the same as what you currently owe. You're not pulling cash out.

Example:

  • Current mortgage balance: $350,000 at 7.25%
  • Refinance to: $350,000 at 6.50%
  • Payment drops from $2,391/month to $2,212/month
  • You save $179/month, but you don't get any cash at closing

(You might finance closing costs into the loan, bumping it to $355,000, but you're not pocketing money.)

What's a Cash-Out Refinance?

With a cash-out refi, you're borrowing more than you owe and taking the difference in cash.

Example:

  • Current mortgage balance: $300,000
  • Home value: $500,000
  • New loan amount: $400,000 at 6.75%
  • You get: $100,000 cash (minus closing costs)

That $100,000 is yours to use however you want—home improvements, debt consolidation, investment property down payment, business capital, whatever.

The Critical Differences

1. Interest Rates

Cash-out refinances cost more. Expect to pay 0.25% to 0.50% higher than a rate-and-term refi.

Current rates (March 2026):

  • Rate-and-term: 6.25% - 6.50%
  • Cash-out: 6.50% - 7.00%

Why? Cash-out loans are riskier for lenders. When people pull equity out, they have more debt and less skin in the game. Default rates are higher.

2. Loan-to-Value (LTV) Limits

This is the big one. How much you can borrow depends on your loan type.

Conventional Loans:

  • Rate-and-term: Up to 97% LTV (with PMI)
  • Cash-out: Maximum 80% LTV

Translation: On a rate-and-term refi, you can refinance even if you only have 3% equity. On a cash-out, you need at least 20% equity.

FHA Loans:

  • Rate-and-term (streamline): Up to 97.75% LTV
  • Cash-out: Maximum 85% LTV (recently increased from 80%)

VA Loans:

  • Rate-and-term (IRRRL): Up to 100% LTV
  • Cash-out: Up to 90% LTV (sometimes 100% with certain lenders)

Jumbo Loans:

  • Rate-and-term: Up to 90% LTV (lender-dependent)
  • Cash-out: Maximum 70-80% LTV

Real scenario: Client has a $600,000 home worth $750,000 (80% LTV). They owe $600,000.

  • Rate-and-term: Can refinance the $600,000 balance
  • Cash-out: Can borrow up to $600,000 (80% of $750K) = $0 available for cash-out

They'd need their home to be worth at least $750,000 to pull any money out at 80% LTV.

3. Credit Score Requirements

Both require decent credit, but cash-out is stricter.

Minimums:

  • Rate-and-term conventional: 620 credit score
  • Cash-out conventional: 640 credit score
  • Rate-and-term FHA: 580 (sometimes 500 with 10% down)
  • Cash-out FHA: 580 with compensating factors

For best rates (740+ credit):

  • Rate-and-term: Full access to best rates
  • Cash-out: Expect 0.125% - 0.25% rate hit even with excellent credit

4. Closing Costs

Closing costs are roughly the same for both (2-5% of loan amount), but with cash-out, you're paying those costs on a larger loan.

Example:

  • Rate-and-term on $350,000: $10,500 in closing costs (3%)
  • Cash-out on $450,000: $13,500 in closing costs (3%)

That extra $3,000 comes out of your cash proceeds. If you were expecting $100,000 cash, you're really getting $96,500 after closing costs.

5. Tax Implications

This is critical and most people miss it.

  • Rate-and-term: Mortgage interest is usually tax-deductible (up to $750K loan limit)
  • Cash-out: Interest is only deductible if you use the cash to buy, build, or substantially improve your home

Example: You pull $100K cash-out to pay off credit cards. The interest on that $100K? Not tax deductible. You're paying 6.75% interest with no tax benefit.

But if you use that $100K to add a second story to your house? Fully deductible.

Talk to your CPA before doing a cash-out refi for non-home purposes.

When to Choose Rate-and-Term

Go with rate-and-term if:

1. You Just Want a Lower Rate

You don't need cash. You just want to save on your monthly payment or pay off your loan faster.

2. You Have Limited Equity

If you have less than 20% equity, cash-out isn't even an option. Rate-and-term is your only play.

Example: You bought 2 years ago with 5% down. Your home has appreciated, but you still only have 15% equity. Cash-out isn't happening. But you can rate-and-term refinance to drop from 7.5% to 6.5%.

3. You're Using an FHA Streamline or VA IRRRL

These streamlined refinances are rate-and-term only. No cash out allowed (except for financing closing costs). But they're fast, cheap, and easy.

If you have an FHA or VA loan and rates have dropped 0.5% or more, a streamline refi is a no-brainer.

4. You Want the Lowest Possible Rate

Rate-and-term gets better pricing. If rate is your priority, don't muddy the waters by taking cash out.

When to Choose Cash-Out

Go with cash-out if:

1. You Need Money for High-ROI Improvements

**Kitchen remodel, ADU, second story, pool (in the right market)—**these can increase your home's value more than they cost.

My take: Using 6.75% mortgage money to add a $150K ADU that increases your home value by $200K? Smart move. The ROI justifies the higher rate.

2. You're Consolidating High-Interest Debt

If you're paying 18-24% on credit cards, swapping that for 6.75% mortgage debt is a massive win.

Example:

  • $50,000 credit card debt at 22% = $1,100/month in interest alone
  • $50,000 refinance cash-out at 6.75% = $281/month in interest
  • Savings: $819/month

Warning: Don't do this unless you've fixed the spending problem. I've seen clients pay off cards with a cash-out refi, then rack up the cards again. Now they have both.

3. You're Buying an Investment Property

Using home equity for a rental property down payment can make sense if the rental income covers the increased mortgage payment.

Math: You pull $100K out. New payment is $650/month higher. You buy a rental that generates $1,500/month in net cash flow. You're ahead $850/month.

4. You Have a Real Need and Home Equity Is Your Cheapest Option

Personal loans cost 10-15%. HELOCs cost 8-10%. Cash-out refinances cost 6.5-7%. If you need a large chunk of money and have equity, a cash-out refi is often the cheapest source.

Just make sure you're not raiding your equity for a depreciating asset like a car or boat.

The Numbers Side-by-Side

Let's run a real scenario. Your home is worth $600,000. You owe $400,000 at 7.5%.

Option 1: Rate-and-Term Refinance

  • New loan amount: $400,000
  • Rate: 6.50%
  • New payment: $2,528/month
  • Old payment was: $2,797/month
  • Monthly savings: $269

Option 2: Cash-Out Refinance ($100K Cash Out)

  • New loan amount: $500,000
  • Rate: 6.75%
  • New payment: $3,242/month
  • Old payment was: $2,797/month
  • Monthly cost increase: $445
  • Cash received: ~$97,000 (after closing costs)

Break-Even Analysis

You're paying an extra $445/month to access $97,000. That's an effective annual cost of $5,340, or 5.5% of the money you pulled out.

Is that worth it? Depends what you're using it for.

  • Paying off 22% credit cards? Yes.
  • Buying a rental property? Maybe.
  • Buying a boat? No.

Common Mistakes

Mistake #1: Pulling Out Cash "Just Because"

Equity isn't free money. It's your home's value minus what you owe. Every dollar you pull out is a dollar you'll pay 6.75% interest on for 30 years.

That $100K cash-out costs you $233,000 in interest over 30 years.

Mistake #2: Ignoring the Rate Hit

People focus on the cash and forget they're paying 0.25-0.50% higher. On a $500K loan, that's $104-$208/month—forever.

Mistake #3: Not Shopping Around

Cash-out rates vary wildly between lenders. I've seen quotes range from 6.50% to 7.25% for the same borrower. Shop at least 3 lenders.

Mistake #4: Maxing Out at 80% LTV

Leave yourself some equity cushion. If your home value drops 10%, you don't want to be underwater. I usually recommend stopping at 75% LTV on cash-outs.

My Broker's Perspective

I do both types all the time. Here's when I steer clients toward each:

Rate-and-term:

  • When rates have dropped 0.5% or more
  • When you just bought and have limited equity
  • When you're using an FHA Streamline or VA IRRRL
  • When you want the absolute lowest rate

Cash-out:

  • When you're consolidating high-interest debt and committed to not running it back up
  • When you're investing in your property (ADU, major remodel)
  • When you need capital for a business or investment and home equity is your cheapest source
  • When you have plenty of equity (60% LTV or lower) and the rate hit is minimal

The hybrid move: Some clients do a rate-and-term refi now, then open a HELOC later for access to cash. The HELOC rate is higher, but you only pay interest on what you use.

Bottom Line

Rate-and-term is for improving your loan. Cash-out is for accessing your equity.

Choose based on what you need, not what you can get. Just because you can pull out $150K doesn't mean you should.

And if you do cash-out, have a plan for the money that justifies the cost. Equity is your financial foundation—don't chip away at it for stuff that won't move your life forward.

Need help deciding? Get a free quote and I'll run both scenarios with your numbers.


Disclaimer: Bill McCoy is a licensed mortgage broker in California (DRE #01212512). Rates and LTV limits shown are general guidelines for March 2026 and vary by lender, credit score, and loan program. This is not financial or tax advice. Consult your CPA regarding tax deductibility.

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About the Author

Bill McCoy

Bill is a licensed mortgage broker with over 15 years of experience helping homeowners save money through refinancing. He specializes in analyzing market trends and finding the best loan options for each client's unique situation.

CA DRE #01212512 | NMLS #[number]