Complete guide to refinancing in Florida. Current rates, hurricane insurance impacts, doc stamps, intangible tax, and expert advice.
Florida refinancing comes with two big curveballs: hurricane insurance (which can wreck your PITI payment even if you lower your rate) and documentary stamps + intangible tax (which add $1,500 - $3,000+ to your closing costs). I'll walk you through exactly what to expect, current rates, and how to avoid expensive surprises.
As of March 19, 2026, here's what Florida 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% | | Coastal/High-Wind Area Refi | 6.50% - 6.75% | 6.55% - 6.80% |
Important: Rates in Florida's coastal high-wind zones (Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, coastal areas) can be 0.125% - 0.375% higher due to insurance requirements and condo warrantability issues. More on that below.
Use our refinance calculator to see what you'd pay based on your specific property and location.
Here's where Florida gets expensive. Unlike most states, Florida charges two state taxes on refinances:
Rate: $0.35 per $100 of the loan amount (rounded up to the nearest $100)
Example: $300,000 loan
This tax is on the promissory note (the amount you're borrowing), not the property value.
Rate: $0.002 per $1 of the loan amount (0.2%)
Example: $300,000 loan
This tax is on the mortgage itself.
Add that to standard closing costs:
| Cost Item | Typical Amount | |-----------|---------------| | Lender origination fee | $0 - $2,500 | | Appraisal | $450 - $600 | | Credit report | $25 - $50 | | Title insurance (refi rate) | $1,500 - $2,500 | | Settlement/closing fee | $400 - $700 | | Recording fees | $150 - $300 | | Documentary stamps (FL tax) | $1,050 (on $300K loan) | | Intangible tax (FL tax) | $600 (on $300K loan) | | Total typical closing costs | $5,500 - $8,500 |
Broker's Tip: Florida's doc stamps and intangible tax add $1,650+ to closing costs on a $300K loan. This is NOT negotiable—it's state law. Factor this into your break-even calculation using our break-even calculator.
Here's what catches Florida homeowners off guard: even if you lower your mortgage rate, your total PITI payment can go UP if your hurricane/windstorm insurance has increased.
When you refinance, your lender will:
What's changed in Florida (2023-2026):
Example:
You lowered your rate but your payment went UP because of insurance.
Broker's Tip: BEFORE you apply for a refinance, call your insurance agent and get a current quote. Ask:
If your insurance has doubled, refinancing might not save you money.
Post-Surfside (the 2021 condo collapse in Miami), lenders have tightened condo requirements. If you own a condo in Florida, your refinance will require:
If you're doing an FHA refinance, the condo must be on the FHA-approved condo list. Many Florida condos have lost FHA approval due to:
Check the FHA condo lookup: https://entp.hud.gov/idapp/html/condlook.cfm
If your condo is not FHA-approved, you'll need to refinance with conventional or VA (if eligible).
Broker's Tip: If your condo has warrantability issues (FHA dropped approval, high delinquencies, special assessment pending), you may need a portfolio lender (non-Fannie/Freddie). Rates will be 0.5% - 1.5% higher, but it's your only option.
The Florida Housing Finance Corporation (FHFC) offers down payment assistance for purchases, not refinances. However, if you used FHFC assistance when you bought, here's what happens when you refinance:
Check your original purchase documents. If you have an FHFC subordinate loan, factor that payoff into your refinance.
Florida has no state income tax. This impacts refinancing indirectly:
DTI calculations — Your take-home pay is higher in Florida vs. high-tax states, which can help you qualify for better rate tiers or larger loan amounts.
Mortgage interest deduction less valuable — Without state income tax, fewer homeowners itemize. If you're taking the standard deduction, paying less interest (via a 15-year mortgage or larger principal payments) might make more sense than maximizing interest deductions.
Cash-out refi for investment properties — Florida is a landlord-friendly state with no income tax on your rental income. Cash-out refis to fund more rentals are tax-efficient.
Consider refinancing if:
Rates are 0.75%+ below your current rate AND insurance hasn't spiked — This is the key. Run the total PITI (principal, interest, taxes, insurance) comparison, not just the rate.
You're switching from ARM to fixed — With Florida's insurance volatility, the last thing you want is an adjustable-rate mortgage AND adjustable insurance costs. Lock in a fixed rate.
You have PMI and 20%+ equity — Florida home values surged 2020-2022. If you bought with less than 20% down and now have 20% equity, refinancing drops PMI and saves $150 - $300/month.
You want to cash out equity for investment properties — Florida has no state income tax and strong rental markets. Cash-out refis at 6.5% - 7.0% to buy more rentals can work if the numbers pencil.
Broker's Tip: Don't refinance based on rate alone. Factor in:
Use our refinance calculator with your full PITI to see real savings.
Here's what moves your rate:
Credit score 740+ — This unlocks the best pricing. Even a jump from 720 to 740 can save 0.25% - 0.375%.
LTV under 80% — More equity = better rate. Dropping from 85% LTV to 75% LTV can save 0.125% - 0.25%.
Property location — Coastal properties in high-wind zones may see rate add-ons of 0.125% - 0.25% due to insurance risk.
Condo vs. single-family — Condos (especially in buildings with warrantability issues) can have rate add-ons of 0.125% - 0.375%.
Full documentation — W-2 income is easiest. Self-employed? 2 years tax returns, P&L, bank statements. Clean docs = better rates.
Shop multiple lenders — Rates vary by 0.25% - 0.50% between lenders on the same day. Get 3-5 quotes.
Yes. Both are required on refinances in Florida:
There's no exemption for refinances. On a $300K loan, expect $1,650 in state taxes.
The only time you avoid these is if you do an assumption (take over the seller's existing loan, rare in 2026 with rates where they are).
Yes, but it might not make financial sense.
Scenario:
If you're paying $6,000 in closing costs to save $17/month, your break-even is 29 years. Not worth it.
Broker's Tip: Get an updated flood insurance quote BEFORE applying. If it's doubled or tripled, refinancing may not save you money even if rates dropped.
You have three options:
Conventional refinance — If the condo meets Fannie/Freddie warrantability (owner-occupancy 50%+, delinquency under 15%, reserves adequate), you can refinance conventional. Rates are similar to FHA.
VA refinance — If you're a veteran, VA loans have looser condo requirements than FHA. Many condos that lost FHA approval still qualify for VA.
Portfolio lender — Non-Fannie/Freddie lenders hold loans on their own books. They have looser condo requirements but charge 0.5% - 1.5% higher rates.
If your condo is in serious financial trouble (high delinquencies, failed recertification, pending litigation), refinancing may be impossible until the association fixes the issues.
Yes. Expect:
Florida is a strong landlord state. I work with investors doing cash-out refis to fund more Florida rentals all the time.
30-45 days on average.
Factors that speed it up:
Factors that slow it down:
Refinance to 15-year if:
Stick with 30-year if:
The 15-year rate is about 0.90% - 1.00% lower (5.43% vs. 6.34% in March 2026), so you save big on interest. But in Florida, insurance volatility makes payment flexibility more valuable than in other states.
If your home appraises below what you need for the refinance:
Rate-and-term refi:
Cash-out refi:
Options:
Florida's market cooled in late 2025-early 2026 in some areas (Miami, Tampa coastal). Low appraisals are more common than 2021-2022.
Here's how to move forward:
Get updated insurance quotes — Homeowners, flood, wind/hurricane. Know what you'll pay BEFORE you apply.
Check your home value — Use Zillow, Redfin, or recent sales in your neighborhood. Estimate your LTV.
Run the numbers — Use our refinance calculator to estimate your new PITI (include the new insurance costs). Then use the break-even calculator to see if the $6K - $8K in closing costs makes sense.
If you own a condo, check warrantability — FHA approval status, reserve study, delinquency rate, pending assessments.
Shop lenders — Get 3-5 quotes. Compare rates, fees, and whether they're familiar with Florida-specific issues (doc stamps, intangible tax, hurricane insurance, condo warrantability).
Want a custom quote for your Florida property? Get your personalized refinance quote here — I'll show you current rates, estimate doc stamps + intangible tax, and factor in your insurance situation. No obligation.
About the Author: Bill McCoy is a licensed mortgage broker with 15 years of experience. While based in California, he works with Florida lenders regularly and has helped hundreds of Florida homeowners navigate refinancing challenges across Miami, Tampa, Orlando, and Jacksonville.
Licensed mortgage broker with 15+ years of experience helping homeowners save money through refinancing. CA DRE #01212512.