Complete guide to refinancing in New York. Current rates, mortgage recording tax, CEMA strategies, and expert advice.
New York has the most expensive refinance closing costs in the country, and it's not even close. The mortgage recording tax can run $5,000 - $20,000+ depending on your county and loan amount. But there's a legal workaround—the CEMA (Consolidation, Extension, and Modification Agreement)—that can save you thousands. I'll explain exactly how it works and when it makes sense.
As of March 19, 2026, here's what New York 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 (NYC) | 6.50% - 6.75% | 6.55% - 6.80% |
Important: New York City and high-cost counties (Westchester, Nassau, Suffolk, Rockland) have conforming loan limits up to $1,149,825 in 2026, so many "jumbo" loans in other states qualify for conventional pricing here.
Use our refinance calculator to see what you'd pay based on your county and loan amount.
Here's the cost that shocks every New York refinance borrower: mortgage recording tax.
The rate varies by county and loan amount:
| Loan Amount | Borrower Pays | Lender Pays | Total Tax | |-------------|--------------|-------------|-----------| | Under $500K | 1.80% | 0.25% | 2.05% | | $500K+ | 1.925% | 0.25% | 2.175% |
Example: $600,000 refinance in NYC
Yes, you read that right. $11,550 just in mortgage recording tax on a $600K refi in NYC. This is on top of all other closing costs.
| County | Rate | |--------|------| | Nassau, Suffolk (Long Island) | 1.05% - 1.30% | | Westchester | 1.05% | | Rockland, Putnam | 1.05% | | Erie (Buffalo) | 1.00% - 1.25% | | Monroe (Rochester) | 1.00% - 1.25% | | Albany | 1.00% - 1.25% | | Most upstate counties | 0.75% - 1.00% |
Even in cheaper upstate counties, you're paying $3,000 - $5,000+ on a $400K loan.
Broker's Tip: Mortgage recording tax is the #1 reason New Yorkers don't refinance even when rates drop significantly. A 1% rate drop might save $200/month, but if you're paying $10K in recording tax upfront, your break-even is 50 months (over 4 years) just from the tax alone.
Here's the legal loophole that saves you thousands: CEMA (Consolidation, Extension, and Modification Agreement).
Instead of paying off your old mortgage and recording a brand new mortgage (which triggers full mortgage recording tax), a CEMA modifies and extends your existing mortgage. You only pay mortgage recording tax on the difference between your old loan balance and the new loan amount.
Example:
| | Standard Refi (No CEMA) | CEMA Refi | |-|------------------------|-----------| | New loan amount | $600,000 | $600,000 | | Old loan balance | $550,000 | $550,000 | | Mortgage recording tax (NYC 1.925%) | $600,000 × 1.925% = $11,550 | $50,000 × 1.925% = $963 | | Tax savings with CEMA | — | $10,587 |
The CEMA saves $10,587 in this example. That's life-changing for a refinance.
Costs of doing a CEMA:
Total CEMA costs: $1,550 - $3,600
Even with these fees, you save $7,000 - $15,000+ on a typical NYC refinance.
CEMA is worth it if:
CEMA may NOT be worth it if:
Broker's Tip: ALWAYS ask your lender if they do CEMAs. If they say "we don't do CEMAs," find a different lender. Any competent New York lender should offer CEMA refinances—it's standard practice.
Here's what you'll pay on a standard New York refinance (based on a $500,000 loan in NYC, without CEMA):
| Cost Item | Typical Amount | |-----------|---------------| | Lender origination fee | $0 - $2,500 | | Appraisal | $500 - $750 | | Credit report | $25 - $50 | | Title insurance (refi rate) | $2,000 - $3,500 | | Attorney fees (borrower) | $1,500 - $2,500 | | Recording fees | $200 - $400 | | Mortgage recording tax (NYC) | $9,625 ($500K × 1.925%) | | Total typical closing costs | $14,000 - $20,000 |
With CEMA (assuming $450K old balance, $500K new loan):
| Cost Item | Typical Amount | |-----------|---------------| | Lender origination fee | $0 - $2,500 | | Appraisal | $500 - $750 | | Credit report | $25 - $50 | | Title insurance (refi rate) | $2,000 - $3,500 | | Attorney fees (borrower + CEMA) | $2,500 - $4,000 | | Recording fees | $200 - $400 | | CEMA processing fee | $500 - $1,500 | | Mortgage recording tax (on $50K gap) | $963 | | Total typical closing costs | $6,700 - $13,700 |
CEMA saves $7,300+ in this example.
Use our break-even calculator to see how long it takes to recoup closing costs.
New York has a massive co-op market (especially in Manhattan). Refinancing a co-op is different from a condo or single-family home.
Co-ops are shares in a corporation, not real property. Your "mortgage" is technically a share loan secured by your shares, not a mortgage on real estate.
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Broker's Tip: If you own a co-op, you avoid the mortgage recording tax nightmare entirely. This is one of the few times co-op ownership is an advantage over a condo.
Condos are real property, so:
The State of New York Mortgage Agency (SONYMA) offers low-rate mortgages for first-time homebuyers, but SONYMA does not offer refinance programs for existing homeowners.
However, if you currently have a SONYMA loan, you may be able to streamline refinance through SONYMA at below-market rates. Contact SONYMA directly or ask your lender if they participate.
For most New York homeowners, refinancing means conventional, FHA, or VA loans.
Because of the mortgage recording tax, the math is different in New York than anywhere else.
Consider refinancing if:
Rates are 1.0%+ below your current rate (without CEMA) — You need bigger savings to offset the tax. If you're paying $10K in recording tax, your monthly savings need to be $300+ to break even in 3 years.
Rates are 0.75%+ below your current rate (with CEMA) — If you can do a CEMA and save $8K - $12K on the recording tax, the standard "0.75% rule" applies.
You own a co-op — No recording tax = easier to justify refinancing with smaller rate drops (0.5% - 0.75%).
You're paying PMI and have 20%+ equity — Dropping PMI saves $150 - $300/month. That can offset recording tax quickly.
Don't refinance if:
Broker's Tip: Run the numbers with our refinance calculator and break-even calculator. New York's recording tax changes the equation—what makes sense in California or Texas might not make sense here.
Here's what moves your rate:
Credit score 740+ — This unlocks the best pricing tiers. Even 720 → 740 saves 0.25% - 0.375%.
LTV under 80% — More equity = better rate. Dropping from 85% LTV to 75% LTV can save 0.125% - 0.25%.
Full documentation — W-2 income is cleanest. Self-employed? 2 years tax returns, P&L, CPA letter. Clean docs = better rates.
Property type — Single-family gets the best rates. Condos add 0.125% - 0.25%. Co-ops (if lender even offers them) can add 0.25% - 0.50%.
Use a CEMA — While this doesn't affect your rate, it massively affects your total cost. A lender that doesn't do CEMAs will cost you $8K - $15K more than one that does.
Shop multiple lenders — Rates vary 0.25% - 0.50% between lenders on the same day. Get quotes from at least 3 lenders.
1.925% of the loan amount for loans $500K+ (borrower pays 1.925%, lender pays 0.25%).
Example: $700,000 refinance = $700,000 × 1.925% = $13,475 in mortgage recording tax.
For loans under $500K: 1.80% (borrower portion).
The only way to reduce this is a CEMA, which taxes only the increase in loan amount, not the full balance.
A CEMA (Consolidation, Extension, and Modification Agreement) is a legal mechanism that modifies your existing mortgage instead of recording a brand new one. You pay mortgage recording tax only on the difference between your old loan balance and new loan amount.
Example:
You should do a CEMA if:
CEMA costs $1,500 - $3,600 in extra fees, but saves $7,000 - $15,000+ in recording tax.
No. Co-ops are shares in a corporation, not real property. There's no mortgage to record, so there's no mortgage recording tax.
This is the single biggest advantage of owning a co-op in New York. You avoid the $8K - $15K recording tax that condo and single-family homeowners pay.
Yes. You'll need:
New York has a large self-employed population (especially NYC). Lenders are comfortable with it, but your documentation needs to be clean.
If your tax returns show low income due to write-offs, ask about bank statement loans. Rates are 0.5% - 1.5% higher, but qualification is based on deposits, not taxable income.
40-50 days on average (standard refi)
45-60 days (CEMA refi, adds time for coordination with old lender)
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 with NYC's high cost of living and high recording tax, payment flexibility often wins.
If your home appraises below your expected value:
Rate-and-term refi:
Cash-out refi:
Options:
NYC's market cooled in late 2025-early 2026, especially in Manhattan luxury and outer-borough condos. Appraisal risk is real.
Here's how to move forward:
Determine if you can do a CEMA — Contact your current lender or servicer and ask if they participate in CEMA refinances.
Estimate your mortgage recording tax — Use the rates above (1.925% in NYC for loans $500K+, 1.05% - 1.30% elsewhere).
Run the numbers — Use our refinance calculator to estimate savings, then use the break-even calculator to see if the closing costs (especially recording tax) make sense.
Find a CEMA-friendly lender — If you're doing a CEMA, not all lenders offer it. Ask upfront.
Get multiple quotes — Rates and fees vary. Compare lender fees, CEMA costs, and total closing costs.
Want a custom quote for your New York property? Get your personalized refinance quote here — I'll show you current rates, calculate your mortgage recording tax (with and without CEMA), and explain whether a refinance makes sense. No obligation.
About the Author: Bill McCoy is a licensed mortgage broker with 15 years of experience. While based in California, he works with New York lenders regularly and has helped hundreds of New York homeowners navigate mortgage recording tax, CEMA strategies, and co-op/condo refinancing across NYC, Long Island, Westchester, and upstate markets.
Licensed mortgage broker with 15+ years of experience helping homeowners save money through refinancing. CA DRE #01212512.