Compare streamline and full doc refinance options. Learn when to use each, what documentation you need, and which saves you more money.
Streamline refinance or full documentation? The difference is how much paperwork you need to provide — and how much flexibility you get.
Let me break down when to use each.
A streamline refinance is a simplified, faster refinance with minimal documentation. You're lowering your rate on an existing government-backed loan (FHA, VA, or USDA).
Key features:
Why streamline? Speed and simplicity. Less paperwork = faster closing = lower costs.
A full doc refinance is the standard refinance process. You provide complete financial documentation and the lender underwrites the loan like you're buying the home today.
Key features:
Why full doc? Flexibility. You can do anything: cash out, change loan types, extend/shorten term.
| Feature | Streamline Refinance | Full Doc Refinance | |---------|----------------------|--------------------| | Appraisal | Usually not required | Required | | Income Docs | Not required (if lowering payment) | Required (pay stubs, W-2s, tax returns) | | Credit Check | Minimal or none | Full credit pull | | Asset Verification | Not required | Bank statements required | | Cash-Out | Not allowed | Allowed | | Loan Type Switch | No (FHA stays FHA, VA stays VA) | Yes (can switch FHA to conventional) | | Closing Time | 15-30 days | 30-45 days | | Closing Costs | $1,500-$3,000 | $3,000-$6,000 | | Available For | FHA, VA, USDA only | All loan types | | Best For | Rate reduction only | Rate reduction + cash-out + loan type change |
Requirements:
Documentation needed:
Costs:
Broker's Tip: FHA Streamline is the fastest, cheapest way to lower your FHA payment. But you're stuck with mortgage insurance for life. If you have 20% equity, consider a full doc refinance to conventional to eliminate PMI entirely.
See our FHA Streamline guide for full details.
IRRRL = Interest Rate Reduction Refinance Loan. It's the VA's streamline program.
Requirements:
Documentation needed:
Costs:
This is the easiest refinance in existence. Minimal paperwork, no appraisal, no credit check. If you have a VA loan and rates dropped, do this immediately.
See our VA IRRRL guide for full details.
Broker's Tip: VA loans are the only loans with no mortgage insurance AND a streamline option. If you're a veteran, this is the best loan program in America.
Requirements:
Documentation needed:
Costs:
USDA streamlines are rare (not many USDA loans out there), but they work similarly to FHA Streamline.
Choose streamline if:
You just want to lower your rate. You're not taking cash out, you're not switching loan types, you just want a lower payment.
You want speed. Streamline refinances close in 15-30 days vs 30-45 for full doc.
Your income situation is complicated. Self-employed? Multiple income sources? Streamline skips income verification (as long as you're lowering your payment).
You don't want an appraisal. Maybe your home value dropped. Streamline doesn't care (no appraisal).
You want to minimize costs. Streamline closing costs are $1,500-$3,000 vs $3,000-$6,000 for full doc.
Current FHA loan:
Refinance with FHA Streamline:
Closing costs: $2,200 (financed into loan) Break-even: 9 months
After 9 months, it's pure savings. Over the life of the loan, you save $84,240 in interest.
Documentation needed: Loan application, current mortgage statement. That's it.
Time to close: 21 days.
Choose full doc refinance if:
You want to take cash out. Streamline doesn't allow it. Full doc lets you tap equity.
You want to switch loan types. FHA to conventional (to drop mortgage insurance), conventional to FHA (if credit dropped), ARM to fixed with a different lender.
You have great credit and want the best rate. Full doc refinances reward high credit scores and low DTI. Streamline rates are one-size-fits-all.
Your home value increased significantly. You want the appraisal to show your equity gain so you can eliminate PMI.
You're refinancing a conventional, jumbo, or portfolio loan. Streamline only works for FHA/VA/USDA.
Current FHA loan:
Refinance to conventional (full doc):
Monthly savings: $252 Annual savings: $3,024
Closing costs: $5,200 Break-even: 20 months
After less than 2 years, you're saving money. Over 30 years, you save $90,720 by eliminating mortgage insurance.
Why you need full doc: You're switching from FHA to conventional. That requires appraisal, income verification, full underwriting.
Income:
Assets:
Credit:
Property:
Current Mortgage:
Broker's Tip: Gather your docs BEFORE you apply. Having everything ready speeds up the process by 7-10 days.
Streamline refinance costs:
Full doc refinance costs:
Streamline is cheaper because you skip the appraisal and pay lower lender fees.
Streamline refinance:
Full doc refinance:
If you're in a hurry (rate lock expiring, need to close fast), streamline wins.
Short answer: Not anymore.
"No-doc" loans (you state your income, lender doesn't verify) disappeared after the 2008 financial crisis. They caused the subprime mortgage meltdown.
Today's options:
If you see "no-doc refinance" advertised, run. It's either a scam or a predatory loan with a 10%+ interest rate.
Q: Can I do a streamline refinance if I have bad credit?
FHA Streamline: Yes. There's no minimum credit score. As long as you're current on your mortgage, you can streamline.
VA IRRRL: Yes. Many lenders don't even pull credit.
Conventional loan: No streamline option exists for conventional loans. You need full doc.
Q: Can I streamline if my home value dropped?
Yes. Streamlines don't require an appraisal (in most cases), so current home value doesn't matter.
Q: Can I streamline if I'm self-employed?
Yes. Streamline refinances skip income verification (if you're lowering your payment). Your employment status doesn't matter.
Q: Can I streamline if I recently got a raise or changed jobs?
Yes. Income changes don't affect streamline eligibility.
Q: Can I combine streamline with cash-out?
No. If you want cash out, you need a full doc refinance (or a VA cash-out refinance, which requires full documentation).
If you have an FHA, VA, or USDA loan AND you just want to lower your rate: Streamline. It's faster, cheaper, and easier.
If you want cash out, want to switch loan types, or have a conventional loan: Full doc. It's the only option.
If you're switching from FHA to conventional to eliminate mortgage insurance: Full doc. The savings are worth the extra paperwork.
Not sure which path makes sense? Let me run the numbers for your specific situation.
Ready to refinance? Get personalized rate quotes for both streamline and full doc options:
I'm a California licensed mortgage broker with 15+ years experience (DRE #01212512). I'll show you which option saves you the most money.
Related guides:
Licensed mortgage broker with 15+ years of experience helping homeowners save money through refinancing. CA DRE #01212512.