Learn how no-closing-cost refinances work, what you're really paying, and when they make sense. Straight talk from a 15-year CA mortgage broker.
"Zero closing costs!" sounds great. But here's the truth: there's no such thing as a free refinance.
You're paying for those costs — you just don't see them upfront. Let me show you how it works and when it makes sense.
A no-closing-cost refinance means you don't pay closing costs out-of-pocket at closing. Instead, the costs are covered by either:
Option 1 is NOT a true "no-cost" refinance — you're paying the costs, just financing them over 30 years.
Option 2 is the real no-cost option — but you pay for it through a higher rate.
Let me break down both.
How it works: Your lender adds closing costs to your loan balance.
Example:
You didn't pay $5,000 at closing, but you're financing it over 30 years at your mortgage rate.
Let's say your rate is 6.25%. That $5,000 becomes $10,875 in total cost over 30 years (principal + interest).
Is this a good deal? Depends. If you're planning to stay in the home for 10+ years, probably not. You're paying double for the closing costs.
But if you're planning to sell or refinance again in 2-3 years? You only pay a fraction of that interest. It can make sense.
Broker's Tip: Rolling costs into your loan increases your loan-to-value (LTV) ratio. If you're close to 80% LTV, this could push you over and trigger PMI. Always check your LTV before choosing this option.
How it works: You accept a higher interest rate in exchange for lender credits that cover your closing costs.
Example:
You're paying 0.375% more on your rate to avoid $5,000 upfront.
Let's run the math on a $400,000 loan:
| Option | Rate | Monthly Payment | Closing Costs | Total Cost (5 Years) | |--------|------|-----------------|---------------|----------------------| | Pay Costs | 6.00% | $2,398 | $5,000 | $148,880 | | No Costs | 6.375% | $2,494 | $0 | $149,640 | | Difference | +0.375% | +$96/month | -$5,000 | +$760 |
Break-even point: 52 months (4.3 years)
If you keep the loan less than 4.3 years, the no-cost option saves you money. If you keep it longer, you lose.
Broker's Tip: Most borrowers refinance or sell within 5-7 years. If that's you, a true no-cost refinance (higher rate, lender credits) can save you money.
Use no-cost if:
You plan to sell or refinance within 5 years. You won't hold the loan long enough for the higher rate to cost you more than the upfront savings.
You're cash-tight. You need to lower your payment but don't have $5,000 sitting around.
Rates are dropping. If you think rates will drop another 0.5-1% in the next 2-3 years, go no-cost now and refinance again later at a lower rate.
You're refinancing frequently. Some people refinance every 2-3 years to tap equity or adjust terms. If that's you, always go no-cost.
Avoid no-cost if:
You plan to keep the loan 10+ years. The higher rate will cost you tens of thousands more than the upfront closing costs.
You have cash and rates are stable. Pay the costs upfront, lock in the lower rate, save money long-term.
You're retiring in this home. You'll hold the loan for 20-30 years. Every 0.25% on your rate matters.
Let's compare a borrower who pays costs upfront vs one who goes no-cost.
Loan amount: $350,000 Time in home: 7 years (then sells)
Option A saves $2,640 over 7 years — but you had to come up with $4,500 upfront.
If you only stayed 3 years:
Break-even point: 5.3 years
Broker's Tip: Ask your lender to show you the break-even analysis for your specific loan amount and rate options. Don't guess.
Typical closing costs on a $400,000 refinance:
What you still pay (even with "no-cost" refinance):
A true no-cost refinance covers lender fees and third-party costs. It does NOT cover prepaids.
Expect to pay $1,000-$3,000 in prepaids even with a "no-cost" refinance.
Lenders offer different credit amounts based on the rate you choose. The higher the rate, the more credit.
Example rate sheet (for a $400,000 loan):
| Rate | Lender Credit | Your Cost at Closing | |------|---------------|----------------------| | 6.00% | $0 | Pay $5,000 | | 6.125% | $1,000 | Pay $4,000 | | 6.25% | $2,500 | Pay $2,500 | | 6.375% | $5,000 | Pay $0 (true no-cost) | | 6.50% | $7,000 | Get $2,000 back |
You can even get cash back if you take a high enough rate. But that's rarely smart. You're paying for that cash through a higher rate for 30 years.
Broker's Tip: Don't take more credit than you need. If your closing costs are $4,000, don't take a 6.50% rate just to get $7,000 in credits. Take 6.125% and break even.
Be careful with lenders advertising "zero cost refinance." Here's what they might mean:
Trick 1: They roll costs into your loan. Not a true no-cost refinance. You're borrowing more and paying interest on it.
Trick 2: They waive their origination fee but you still pay third-party costs. You might save $1,000 on origination but still pay $3,000-$4,000 for appraisal, title, etc.
Trick 3: They're comparing to a bloated cost scenario. "Save $8,000 in closing costs!" compared to what? A refinance with a $3,000 origination fee? Most lenders charge 1%.
What to ask:
March 2026: You refinance at 6.50% with zero closing costs (higher rate).
December 2026: Rates drop to 5.75%. You refinance again with zero closing costs.
You avoided paying closing costs twice. If you had paid $5,000 in March, you'd throw away that money when you refinanced in December. Smart move.
You're planning to sell in 18 months but rates dropped 1% and you want to lower your payment now.
Pay costs: $5,000 upfront, recover maybe $2,000 in savings over 18 months. Net loss: $3,000.
No-cost: $0 upfront, pay an extra $80/month for 18 months = $1,440. Net loss: $1,440.
No-cost saves you $1,560 in this scenario.
You're drowning in credit card debt but you have equity in your home. You want to refinance to lower your mortgage payment and free up cash to attack the credit cards.
You don't have $5,000 for closing costs. Go no-cost, lower your payment, use the cash flow to pay off high-interest debt.
Can you deduct closing costs?
On a refinance: No. Closing costs are NOT tax-deductible (with one exception: points paid to reduce your rate can be deducted over the life of the loan).
Prepaid interest IS deductible in the year you pay it (if you itemize).
This doesn't change whether you pay costs upfront or go no-cost. Both paths have the same tax treatment.
Consult a CPA. I'm a mortgage broker, not a tax advisor.
Step 1: How long will you keep this loan?
Step 2: Do you have cash reserves?
Step 3: What do you think rates will do?
Step 4: Run the math. Ask your lender for total cost over 3, 5, and 10 years for both options. Pick the one that saves you money over your expected timeline.
Use our refinance calculator to model different scenarios.
Q: Can I do a no-closing-cost refinance on any loan type?
Yes. FHA, VA, conventional, jumbo — all allow lender credits to cover closing costs.
Q: Will a no-cost refinance hurt my credit?
No more than a regular refinance. Your credit takes a small, temporary hit from the inquiry (5-10 points). Recovered in 3-6 months.
Q: Can I negotiate lender credits?
Absolutely. If Lender A offers you $4,000 in credits at 6.375% and Lender B offers $5,000 at 6.25%, Lender A might match to win your business. Shop around.
Q: What if I pay closing costs upfront and then sell a year later?
You lose. You paid $5,000 and didn't hold the loan long enough to benefit from the lower rate. This is why I recommend no-cost for anyone who might move or refinance within 5 years.
Q: Can I combine no-closing-cost with a cash-out refinance?
Yes, but it's complicated. Lender credits are based on your NEW loan amount. If you're cashing out $50,000, your closing costs are higher (based on a $450,000 loan instead of $400,000). You might need a higher rate to cover them.
"No-closing-cost" doesn't mean free. You're either:
When it makes sense:
When to avoid:
Always run the break-even analysis. Ask your lender to show you total cost over 3, 5, and 10 years for both pay-costs and no-cost options.
Want to see your no-cost refinance options? Get personalized rate quotes with and without closing costs:
I'm a California licensed mortgage broker with 15+ years experience (DRE #01212512). I'll show you the break-even point and which option saves you money.
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Licensed mortgage broker with 15+ years of experience helping homeowners save money through refinancing. CA DRE #01212512.