loans

points

Upfront fees paid to a lender to reduce the mortgage interest rate, where one point equals 1% of the loan amount.

Example

Paying 2 points on a $400,000 mortgage cost $8,000 upfront but lowered the rate by 0.5%.

Memory Tip

POINTS = percentage POINTS you pay upfront to buy down your rate.

Why It Matters

Points significantly affect the total cost of a mortgage over time. By understanding how points work, borrowers can calculate whether paying upfront fees to lower their interest rate will save them money in the long run, which depends on how long they plan to keep the loan.

Common Misconception

Many people assume that buying points always saves money, but this is not true for everyone. Points only benefit borrowers who keep their mortgage long enough to recover the upfront cost through lower monthly payments.

In Practice

On a 300,000 dollar mortgage, one point costs 3,000 dollars upfront and typically reduces the interest rate by 0.25%. If this lowers your monthly payment by 75 dollars, you would break even in 40 months, so points make sense if you plan to stay in the home for more than 3.3 years.

Etymology

From Latin 'punctum' (dot, point) — one POINT equals one percentage point of the loan amount.

Common Misspellings

pointzpontspoins
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Related Terms

mortgageAPRclosing costs

More in loans

Other loans terms you should know

amortizationThe process of spreading out a loan into a series of fixed pamortizeTo gradually pay off a debt through regular payments that cocollateralAn asset pledged as security for a loan, which the lender caloanA sum of money borrowed that is expected to be paid back witprincipalThe original sum of money borrowed in a loan, or the amount refinancingThe process of replacing an existing loan with a new one, us

See Also

rate buydown
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