Although many home searchers tend to hyper-focus on a home’s sticker price, the impact of the mortgage rate is equally important. A great rate can shave hundreds of dollars off the monthly mortgage payment, while a high rate can push a home out of reach. Now that rock-bottom rates of 2% and 3% are firmly in the rearview mirror, it’s time for buyers to educate themselves on their options.
A mortgage buydown occurs when a homebuyer (or a seller, on their behalf) pays an upfront fee to a lender in exchange for a lower interest rate on their mortgage loan.
This upfront payment effectively reduces the borrower's monthly mortgage payments.
Buydowns are often used to make homeownership more affordable in the early years of ownership, especially when interest rates are relatively high. They can be structured in various ways, such as 2-1 or 3-2-1 buydowns. A 3-2-1 buydown, for example, means your rate is reduced by 3% the first year, 2% the second year, and 1% the final year—allowing you to gradually adjust to your full rate.
However, buyers can also opt to buy down their rates for the entirety of the loan term—meaning they get a lower mortgage rate for life. This is known as buying mortgage points.
The cost of a 3-2-1 or 2-1 loan is calculated as the difference between the total payments made at the original monthly payment, and the total payments made at the rate-adjusted monthly payments.
For mortgage points, the cost varies (depending on the loan, the lender, etc.) but generally, it costs 1% of the loan amount to receive each "point", and each point buys a .25% rate reduction. So for a $400,000 loan, reducing the interest rate 1% will cost 4% of the loan amount—or $16,000.
Like any financial choice, there are costs and benefits associated with buying down your mortgage rate.
Benefits:
Drawbacks:
Benefits:
Drawbacks:
Many sellers offer rate buydowns in the listing description of their home, which means you don’t need to do any work. Your Realtor can help you find homes that offer this—you can also do a keyword search on sites like Redfin for terms like “rate” “buydown” and “financing” to find the relevant listings.
Typically if the seller doesn’t offer it outright, buyers will request it in their initial offer—just ask your Realtor to include this. Some buyers will try to make their offer more appealing in other ways, by removing contingencies, allowing a seller rentback, offering the full asking price, etc.
Of course, the seller might counter your offer and drop the rate buydown—but you can choose whether or not you want to accept. In today’s environment, many sellers are willing to do what ti takes to lock in a qualified buyer.
There are both pros and cons to buying down your mortgage rate. If the seller offers you a 2-1 or 3-2-1 buydown, this is often the best scenario—the money isn’t coming out of your pocket, and it gives you several years to save up money (and see whether a better rate hits the market). Buying down your 30-year rate, meanwhile, is best for buyers who plan on staying in their home for the majority of the loan term.