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Dr. Don Taylor, CFA, Bankrate.com advice columnistRefinancing with a prepayment penalty

Dear Dr. Don,
I refinanced my home in November of 2005. I got a variable rate loan tied to an index (LIBOR). It's a 30-year mortgage with a two-year balloon. I've since discovered that the mortgage has a prepayment clause that penalizes me if I refinance the loan before the balloon date. My question is, should I try to refinance before the balloon date and pay the prepayment penalty or should I hold out until the balloon date?
-- Shirley Structure

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Dear Shirley,
The structure of your type of mortgage is generally used when the borrower has a weak credit rating. Establishing a good payment history on the mortgage over the first two years improves your credit score to the point where you can refinance at a better rate.

You're less than six months into this mortgage. It's not likely that the payment history on this mortgage has done all that much to improve your credit score, but that's easy enough to check if you're willing to purchase your credit score to see where you stand.

While you can get one free credit report each year from the credit bureaus, you still have to pay for a credit score.

I wouldn't recommend buying your credit scores from all three credit bureaus. Pick one and check for improvement. Bankrate provides the contact information. Bankrate has also partnered with myFICO to offer a free credit score estimator. It'll give you a credit score range but doesn't provide an exact scoring.

There's no finessing the prepayment cost and, unless you see some improvement in your credit score, you're not likely to see a better interest rate on the refinancing. That makes refinancing now an expensive proposition. Read your loan documents or talk to your lender about the size of the prepayment penalty and how it is calculated. Don't forget the closing costs you'll have to pay on a new fixed mortgage.

Both fixed and variable mortgage rates are likely to trend higher over the next year and a half, but building a better credit history is likely to get you a better interest rate than you could qualify for today.

Bankrate's refinancing calculator can help you decide if it makes sense to refinance by incorporating closing and other costs into the picture.

To ask a question of Dr. Don, go to the "Ask the Experts" page, and select one of these topics: "Financing a home," "Saving & investing" or "Money."

Bankrate.com's corrections policy -- Posted: March 22, 2006
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