Complete guide to refinancing in Washington State. Current rates, WA housing programs, costs, and expert advice.
I own rental property in Spokane, Washington, so I know this market firsthand. Washington has some unique advantages—no state income tax, strong home equity growth, and solid state housing programs. But if you're in Seattle or the Puget Sound region, you're dealing with one of the most expensive housing markets in the country. Here's exactly what you need to know about refinancing in Washington in 2026.
As of March 19, 2026, here's what Washington 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 (Seattle/Puget Sound) | 6.50% - 6.75% | 6.55% - 6.80% |
Important: Seattle, King County, and surrounding Puget Sound counties have conforming loan limits up to $1,149,825 in 2026. Many homes that would require jumbo loans elsewhere qualify for conventional rates here.
Use our refinance calculator to see what you'd pay based on your county and loan amount.
The Washington State Housing Finance Commission (WSHFC) offers programs for homebuyers, and while most are for purchases, there are implications if you used WSHFC assistance when you bought your home.
WSHFC offers deferred-payment second mortgages (no monthly payment, due when you sell, refinance, or transfer the property).
What happens when you refinance:
Broker's Tip: If you bought with WSHFC down payment assistance, check your loan documents and calculate your current equity before applying for a refinance. If your equity isn't sufficient, you may need to wait or explore subordination options.
These are purchase-only programs offering:
If you currently have a WSHFC loan from one of these programs, you can refinance into a conventional, FHA, or VA loan—but you'll lose the below-market rate and need to pay off any DPA loans.
Pros:
Cons:
Broker's Tip: Before refinancing from a WSHFC loan, compare your current rate + terms to what you'd get with a new conventional/FHA loan. Sometimes the WSHFC rate is still better, especially if you locked years ago when rates were lower.
Here's what you'll pay on a standard Washington refinance (based on a $500,000 loan):
| Cost Item | Typical Amount | |-----------|---------------| | Lender origination fee | $0 - $2,500 | | Appraisal | $500 - $750 | | Credit report | $25 - $50 | | Title insurance (refi rate) | $1,200 - $2,200 | | Escrow/settlement fee | $400 - $700 | | Recording fees | $200 - $350 | | Notary | $75 - $150 | | Lender's title policy | $600 - $1,000 | | Total typical closing costs | $4,500 - $7,500 |
Washington has no state mortgage recording tax or documentary stamps on refinances. This is a huge advantage vs. states like New York or Florida.
However, King County (Seattle) and some other counties charge higher recording fees than the rest of the state. Expect $250 - $350 in King County vs. $150 - $200 in Spokane County.
Use our break-even calculator to figure out how long it takes to recoup these costs through monthly savings.
Washington has no state income tax (one of only 9 states with no income tax). This impacts refinancing indirectly:
DTI calculations — Your take-home pay is higher in Washington vs. California, Oregon, or other high-tax states. This can help you qualify for better rate tiers or larger loan amounts.
Tax deduction strategy — Without state income tax, the mortgage interest deduction is less valuable. If you're not itemizing federally, a 15-year mortgage (higher payment, less interest) might make more sense than stretching to a 30-year.
Investment property strategy — If you're doing a cash-out refi to buy rental property (like I did in Spokane), your rental income isn't hit with state tax. Washington is a landlord-friendly state for cash-flow investors.
Relocation appeal — Washington attracts high earners from California and other high-tax states. This keeps home values strong in Seattle/Bellevue, which supports refinancing equity.
Washington has multiple high-cost counties where the conforming loan limit exceeds the national baseline of $832,750.
| County | 2026 Conforming Limit | |--------|----------------------| | King County (Seattle, Bellevue) | $1,149,825 | | Snohomish County (Everett) | $1,149,825 | | Pierce County (Tacoma) | $1,149,825 | | Kitsap County | $1,149,825 | | Thurston County (Olympia) | $832,750 | | Spokane County | $832,750 | | Clark County (Vancouver) | $832,750 | | Most other counties | $832,750 |
Why this matters:
Consider refinancing if:
Rates are 0.75%+ below your current rate — The old "1% rule" is outdated. If you can save 0.75% and plan to stay 3+ years, refinancing makes sense.
You're switching from ARM to fixed — If you have a 5/1 or 7/1 ARM nearing adjustment, locking in a 6.3% - 6.5% fixed rate beats future uncertainty.
You have PMI and 20%+ equity — Washington 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 — Washington homeowners have record equity. Cash-out refinancing at 6.5% - 7.0% beats personal loans or HELOCs (which are running 8% - 10% in 2026). Use it for home improvements, debt consolidation, or investment properties.
Broker's Tip: Seattle-area homeowners often sit on $300K - $500K+ in equity. Cash-out refis to buy rental property in Spokane or other affordable WA markets are common. I did exactly this—used Seattle equity to buy Spokane rentals. The cash flow works beautifully.
Here's what moves your rate:
Credit score 740+ — This unlocks the best pricing tiers. Even jumping from 720 to 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%.
Property type — Single-family homes get the best rates. Condos add 0.125% - 0.25%. Investment properties add 0.5% - 0.875%.
Full documentation — W-2 income is easiest. Self-employed? You'll need 2 years tax returns, P&L, bank statements. Seattle has tons of tech contractors and self-employed professionals—lenders are comfortable with it, but docs need to be clean.
Shop multiple lenders — Rates vary 0.25% - 0.50% between lenders on the same day. Get quotes from 3-5 lenders (or use a broker who can shop 20+).
Lock strategically — Rates are volatile in 2026. If you see a good rate, lock it. Most locks are 30-45 days, and float-down options exist if rates drop after you lock.
No. Washington has no state mortgage recording tax or documentary stamps. You only pay:
This is a huge advantage vs. New York (1.8% - 1.925% mortgage tax) or Florida (doc stamps + intangible tax).
Yes. Washington has a large self-employed population (tech contractors, consultants, small business owners).
You'll need:
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.
Broker's Tip: Seattle-area tech contractors with 1099 income often show low taxable income due to retirement contributions, home office deductions, etc. Bank statement loans let you qualify based on actual cash flow, not tax returns.
30-45 days on average.
Factors that speed it up:
Factors that slow it down:
Yes. I've done this multiple times with my Spokane rentals.
Expect:
Washington is a landlord-friendly state:
Cash-out refis to buy more Washington rentals are common. The numbers work.
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 Seattle's high cost of living often makes payment flexibility more valuable.
If you used Washington State Housing Finance Commission (WSHFC) down payment assistance when you bought:
Check your equity first:
If you're doing a cash-out refi (max 80% LTV = $400K), you can't pay off both loans. You'd need to wait or explore subordination.
Yes, but expect:
Seattle-specific condo issues:
If your condo has warrantability issues, you may need a portfolio lender (non-Fannie/Freddie). Rates are 0.5% - 1.5% higher, but it's your only option.
Broker's Tip: Before applying, check your HOA's financial health. Request:
If any red flags, talk to a lender BEFORE ordering an appraisal.
Anything above the conforming limit in your county is considered a jumbo loan.
In King/Snohomish/Pierce counties (conforming limit $1,149,825), you hit jumbo at $1,149,826+. In Spokane (conforming limit $832,750), you hit jumbo at $832,751+.
Jumbo refinance requirements in Washington (2026):
Broker's Tip: If you're close to the conforming limit, consider:
Jumbo loans aren't terrible in 2026 (spreads are narrow), but conforming pricing is always better.
Here's how to move forward:
Check your home value — Use Zillow, Redfin, or recent sales in your neighborhood. Estimate your LTV.
Determine what type of refinance you need — Rate-and-term (just lowering your rate/term) or cash-out (pulling equity)?
Run the numbers — Use our refinance calculator to estimate monthly savings. Then use the break-even calculator to see how long it takes to recoup closing costs.
If you have a WSHFC loan, check your equity — Make sure you can pay off both the first mortgage and any DPA loans.
Get multiple quotes — Rates and fees vary. Compare apples-to-apples (same loan type, LTV, lock period).
Want a custom quote for your Washington property? Get your personalized refinance quote here — I'll show you current rates for your county, estimate closing costs, and explain whether refinancing makes sense. No obligation.
About the Author: Bill McCoy is a licensed mortgage broker with 15 years of experience. He owns 28 rental units in Spokane, Washington through his company City Center Rentals LLC, and has helped hundreds of Washington homeowners refinance across Seattle, Tacoma, Spokane, and Olympia markets.
Licensed mortgage broker with 15+ years of experience helping homeowners save money through refinancing. CA DRE #01212512.