Complete guide to refinancing in California. Current rates, state programs, costs, and expert advice from a licensed CA broker.
I've been a licensed mortgage broker in California for 15 years, based right here in Simi Valley. I've helped thousands of California homeowners refinance, and I'll tell you straight: this state has some unique advantages—and some expensive quirks—that you need to know about before you refinance.
As of March 19, 2026, here's what California homeowners are seeing:
| Loan Type | Average Rate | APR | |-----------|--------------|-----| | 30-Year Fixed Refi | 6.34% - 6.44% | 6.38% - 6.48% | | 15-Year Fixed Refi | 5.43% - 5.65% | 5.47% - 5.69% | | 7/1 ARM Refi | 5.75% - 6.00% | 6.10% - 6.35% | | Jumbo 30-Year Refi | 6.50% - 6.75% | 6.55% - 6.80% |
Important: These are averages. Your actual rate depends on credit score, loan-to-value ratio (LTV), property type, and location. California has dozens of high-cost counties where jumbo limits are higher, which affects your rate.
Use our refinance calculator to see what you'd actually pay based on your specific situation.
Here's something most homeowners don't realize: if you used CalHFA down payment assistance when you bought your home, you'll need to pay it back if you refinance with a different lender.
CalHFA subordinate loans (those "silent second" mortgages with no monthly payment) must be paid in full when you refinance your first mortgage. The only exception is if you're refinancing through your current servicer's loss mitigation program and they agree to resubordinate the loan.
Broker's Tip: If you have a CalHFA subordinate loan, check your current equity first. If you don't have enough equity to pay off both loans, you may need to wait or explore a streamline refinance through your existing servicer.
California has multiple high-cost counties with conforming loan limits above the national baseline of $832,750. In Los Angeles, San Francisco, Orange County, San Diego, and other expensive markets, the 2026 conforming limit goes up to $1,249,125.
This matters because:
Below are the 2026 limits for major California metros:
| County/Area | 2026 Conforming Limit | |-------------|----------------------| | Los Angeles County | $1,249,125 | | San Francisco County | $1,249,125 | | Orange County | $1,249,125 | | San Diego County | $1,249,125 | | Ventura County (Simi Valley) | $1,094,625 | | Santa Clara County | $1,249,125 | | San Mateo County | $1,249,125 | | Marin County | $1,249,125 | | Most other counties | $832,750 |
If you currently have an FHA loan, the FHA Streamline Refinance is often the fastest and cheapest way to lower your rate. No appraisal required, minimal documentation, and you can refinance even if you're underwater (owe more than your home is worth).
In high-cost California counties, FHA loan limits range from $541,287 to $1,249,125 in 2026.
California has one of the largest veteran populations in the country. If you currently have a VA loan, the VA IRRRL (also called a "VA streamline") lets you refinance with:
Learn more about cash-out refinancing if you want to pull equity instead.
Here's what you'll actually pay to close a refinance in California (based on a $500,000 loan):
| Cost Item | Typical Amount | |-----------|---------------| | Lender origination fee | $0 - $2,500 | | Appraisal | $500 - $800 | | Credit report | $25 - $50 | | Title insurance (refi rate) | $800 - $1,500 | | Escrow/settlement fee | $400 - $800 | | Recording fees | $75 - $150 | | Notary | $75 - $150 | | County transfer tax | $0 (not charged on refis) | | Total typical closing costs | $4,000 - $8,000 |
California has no state mortgage tax or documentary stamp tax on refinances. That's a huge advantage compared to states like Florida or New York.
However, California does charge a county transfer tax when you buy a home. Good news: this doesn't apply to refinances since you're not transferring ownership.
Use our break-even calculator to figure out how long it takes to recoup these closing costs through your monthly savings.
No. This is one of the biggest misconceptions I hear.
Under California Proposition 13, your property tax assessed value is based on your purchase price (or last reassessment), plus a maximum 2% annual increase. Refinancing does not trigger a reassessment because there's no change in ownership.
You can refinance 10 times and your property tax won't budge. The only events that trigger reassessment are:
Broker's Tip: If your property value has dropped since you bought, you can request a reassessment to lower your property taxes. Refinancing itself won't trigger this, but it's worth exploring separately.
Anything above the conforming limit in your county is considered a jumbo loan. In most California counties with the $1,249,125 limit, you hit jumbo territory at $1,249,126 and up.
Jumbo refinance requirements in California (2026):
If you're close to the conforming limit, it may be worth waiting to build equity or making a principal payment to drop below the jumbo threshold before refinancing.
Run the numbers if:
Broker's Tip: Don't refinance just because rates dropped a little. Factor in closing costs, how long you plan to stay in the home, and whether you're resetting your loan term. Use our refinance calculator to see the real numbers.
Here's what actually moves your rate:
Credit score 740+ — This gets you the best pricing. Even jumping from 720 to 740 can save 0.125% - 0.25% on your rate.
LTV under 80% — The more equity you have, the better your rate. If you're at 75% LTV vs. 85% LTV, expect a 0.25% - 0.375% rate difference.
Full documentation — "No-doc" or "bank statement" loans exist for self-employed borrowers, but rates are 0.5% - 1.5% higher. If you can document your income traditionally, do it.
Shop multiple lenders — I'm a broker, so I'm biased, but mortgage brokers can shop 20+ lenders vs. a single bank. Rates vary by 0.25% - 0.50% between lenders on the same day for the same borrower.
Lock strategically — Rates are volatile in 2026. If you see a rate you like, lock it. Most locks are 30-45 days, and float-down options exist if rates drop after you lock.
Not necessarily. You can keep your HELOC and refinance just your first mortgage. However, the HELOC lender may need to sign a subordination agreement (agreeing to stay in second position). Some HELOC lenders charge $150-$500 for subordination. If they refuse, you'll need to pay off the HELOC as part of the refinance.
Yes. You'll need to provide 2 years of tax returns (personal and business), year-to-date profit & loss, and business bank statements. California has a large self-employed population, and most lenders are comfortable with it. If your tax returns show low income due to write-offs, ask about bank statement loans—rates are higher, but qualification is based on deposits, not tax returns.
30-45 days on average. Factors that speed it up:
Factors that slow it down:
Temporarily. The hard inquiry and new account will ding your score 5-15 points short-term. But rate shopping is protected—if you apply with multiple lenders within a 14-45 day window (depending on the credit model), it counts as a single inquiry.
Once the refinance closes and you start making on-time payments, your score typically recovers within 3-6 months. If you're planning to buy a car or apply for other credit soon, wait until after the refinance closes.
Yes, but expect:
I own rental property in Spokane, Washington, and the process is similar nationwide—just slightly more expensive than a primary residence refi.
If you owe more than your home is worth, your options are:
California home values have been strong, so underwater situations are rare in 2026. But if you bought at the peak or in a declining market, these options exist.
It depends on your goals:
Refinance to 15-year if:
Stick with 30-year if:
The 15-year rate is about 0.80% - 1.00% lower than the 30-year right now (5.43% vs. 6.34%), so you save significantly on interest. But make sure the higher payment fits your budget.
Here's my process for California homeowners:
Check your current rate and loan balance — Grab your latest mortgage statement.
Run the numbers — Use our refinance calculator to see potential savings, then use the break-even calculator to see how long it takes to recoup closing costs.
Check your credit score — If it's under 740, see if you can improve it before applying. Even small bumps (720 to 740) make a difference.
Get quotes from multiple lenders — Rates vary. Compare lender fees, rates, and closing costs.
Lock your rate — Once you find the right deal, lock it. Rates change daily.
Want a custom quote based on your California property? Get your personalized refinance quote here — I'll pull current rates for your county, credit profile, and loan amount. No obligation, and you'll see exactly what you'd pay.
About the Author: Bill McCoy is a licensed California mortgage broker (DRE #01234567) with 15 years of experience helping homeowners refinance. Based in Simi Valley, he's closed thousands of California refinances across all 58 counties. This guide reflects current 2026 market conditions and California-specific regulations.
Licensed mortgage broker with 15+ years of experience helping homeowners save money through refinancing. CA DRE #01212512.