How to Interpret Your Refinance Calculator Results
This calculator helps you understand refinance savings. Here is how to read and act on your results:
What the Numbers Mean
Results are estimates based on standard formulas used across the mortgage industry. Your actual numbers will depend on your specific lender, credit profile, property taxes, and insurance costs. Use this calculator to understand ranges and scenarios — not as a commitment or guarantee.
How to Use This to Compare Scenarios
The most powerful use of this calculator is scenario comparison. Try different inputs — what if you put 5% more down? What if rates fall 0.5%? What if you pay an extra $200/month? Running scenarios helps you understand the levers you control and their impact on your long-term costs.
Next Steps After Using This Calculator
Frequently Asked Questions
How accurate are online mortgage calculators?
Online calculators use the same standard formulas lenders use internally (amortization formula, DTI calculation, LTV). They are highly accurate for the core math. Where they differ from reality: they can't account for your specific lender's pricing, your credit-score-based rate adjustment, or local variations in taxes and insurance. Use calculators for directional accuracy and scenario planning, then get a formal Loan Estimate from a lender for exact numbers.
Should I get pre-approved before using a calculator?
Use calculators first to understand the landscape — what price range is affordable, what DTI your debts put you at, what different down payments cost monthly. Then get pre-approved to confirm those estimates against what lenders will actually offer you. Pre-approval involves a credit pull and income verification, turning estimates into real numbers.