Article - Another way to reduce mortgage payments
Jan 2011
Home owners can trim their monthly mortgage payments by “recasting” or
“re-amortizing” their loan, without having to refinance and face hefty closing cost fees, experts say.
When recasting, the borrower pays off a lump sum of the loan’s principal and then resets monthly
payments at the loan’s original interest rate and terms.
Here’s one scenario: $230,449 is left on a 30-year fixed rate loan for a $300,000 mortgage taken
out at 7.93 percent in 1995. The borrower pays $20,000 toward the principal and asks the lender to reamortize
their payments over the remaining 15 years of the loan. The monthly payment then drops by $52, from $2,187 to
$2,135 per month. ($100,000 toward the lump sum would save $730 a month.)
Since borrowers are not asking for a new loan, they will not have to pay closing costs or submit
to another credit check. (Note: “Recasting” is often used in the mortgage industry to refer to interest rate
resets on adjustable-rate mortgages. In this case, the interest rate and loan term remain the same.
)
“People don’t really know about it, but it’s become more common recently,” Alan Rosenbaum,
founder and chief executive of the Guardhill Financial Corporation in New York, said about
recasting.
Borrowers who just make extra payments toward the loan’s principal but do not ask the bank to
recast the loan will keep monthly payments the same and just shorten the overall time it takes to pay off the
loan. Recasting, on the other hand, reduces the principal but then, in turn, lowers monthly payments and
interest over the life of the loan.
Some recent buyers may find recasting a good option, particularly when it makes little financial
sense to refinance so soon after purchasing a home but are expecting a large sum of money. For example,
buyers who expect to receive a tax refund or other substantial money after closing on their property, such as
proceeds from the sale of another property or stocks, may want to look into recasting to lower monthly
payments, says Edward Ades, the owner of Universal Mortgage in Brooklyn, N.Y.
Source: “A Little-Known Strategy for Cutting Mortgage Payments,” New York Times (Dec. 30, 2010)
Dy Associates is an Oakland Real Estate company specializing in commercial, home and
investment property in the Oakland and East Bay Area. We provide real estate services including buyer agent,
seller agent, short sales, commercial and investment aquisitions, loan facilitation, hard money lending, proerty
management. Articles are provided as information only. We do not provide legal or general investment
advice.
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