Key takeaways

  • Mortgage points are upfront fees you can pay your mortgage lender in exchange for a lower interest rate.
  • Typically, one point costs 1 percent of the amount you borrow and reduces your interest rate by 0.25 percent.
  • If you're not sure if you should buy points, calculate the breakeven timeline: how long it'll take the interest savings to outweigh the cost of points.

When purchasing a home, there are many factors to consider, including the type of mortgage you want and the interest rate you’ll pay. Another consideration is buying mortgage points to lower your rate. Here’s more on how points work, including their benefits and drawbacks and how to calculate the breakeven point.

What are mortgage points?

Mortgage points are the fees a borrower pays a mortgage lender to get a lower interest rate on their loan. Doing so lowers the overall amount of interest they pay over the mortgage term. This practice is sometimes called “buying down the interest rate.”

Each point the borrower buys costs 1 percent of the mortgage amount. One point on a $300,000 mortgage would cost $3,000.

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Keep in mind: The longer you plan to live in a home, the more potential benefit you'll get from paying for points.

In effect, mortgage points are a type of prepaid interest. By buying these points, you reduce the interest rate of your loan, typically by 0.25 percent per point. You can often buy a fraction of a point or up to as many as three whole points — sometimes even more.

By reducing the loan’s interest rate, you can lower your monthly payment and the interest you’ll pay over time. However, keep in mind that this requires an upfront payment. Typically, the longer you plan to live in a home, the more benefit you’ll get from paying for points.

Discount points vs. origination points

Don’t confuse mortgage points that lower your interest rate — also known as “discount points” — with origination points. An origination point doesn’t affect the interest rate on your mortgage; rather, it’s a required fee the lender charges to create, review and process the loan.

One origination point typically equals 1 percent of the total mortgage. Similar to discount points, you’ll pay origination points as part of your closing costs.

Not all lenders charge origination points. Some lenders allow borrowers to get a loan with no or reduced closing costs or origination points. They often compensate for that with a higher interest rate or other fees, however.

How do mortgage points work?

Each mortgage discount point typically lowers your loan’s interest rate by 0.25 percent. One point would lower a mortgage rate of 6.5 percent to 6.25 percent for the life of the loan.

How much each point lowers the rate varies among lenders, however. The rate-reducing power also depends on the type of mortgage loan and the overall interest rate environment. When you explore buying points, ask your loan officer for specifics.

You can buy more than one point, and even fractions of a point. A half-point on a $300,000 mortgage, for example, would cost $1,500 and lower the mortgage rate by about 0.125 percent.

You’ll pay for the points at closing, and they’re listed on the loan estimate document, which you’ll receive after applying for a mortgage, and the closing disclosure, which you’ll receive a few days before closing the loan.

How much can you save by paying mortgage points?

If you can afford to buy discount points on top of the down payment and closing costs, you’ll lower your monthly mortgage payments and could save lots of money. The key is staying in the home long enough to recoup the prepaid interest. If you sell the home after only a few years, or refinance the mortgage or pay it off, buying discount points could lose you money.

Here’s an example of how discount points can reduce costs on a $320,000, 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage:

Without points With 1 point With 2 points
Interest rate 7.0% 6.75% 6.5%
Cost of points $0 $3,200 $6,400
Monthly payment (principal and interest) $2,129 $2,076 $2,023
Total interest paid $446,428 $427,185 $408,142
Total savings $0 $19,243 $38,286

In this example, the borrower bought two discount points costing 1 percent of the loan principal, or $3,200 each. By buying two points for $6,400 upfront, the borrower’s interest rate shrank to 6.5 percent, lowering their monthly payment by $85, and saving them $30,709 in interest over the life of the loan. (Note that to save that full amount, the borrower would have to live in the home for the full term of the loan — 30 years — and never refinance.)

How to calculate the breakeven point

To calculate the “breakeven point” at which you’d recover your outlay on the prepaid interest, divide the cost of the mortgage points by the amount the reduced rate saves each month. Here’s an example:

Mortgage Calculator
Breakeven calculation
Cost of points / monthly payment savings

$6,400 / $85 = 75 months

This shows that our borrower would have to stay in the home for about 75 months, or just over six years, to recover the cost of the points.

You can use Bankrate’s mortgage points calculator and amortization calculator to figure out whether buying mortgage points will save you money.

Pros and cons of mortgage points

Mortgage points offer both benefits and drawbacks:

Pros of mortgage points

  • Lower interest rate: By purchasing mortgage points, you’re lowering the interest rate on your loan, which translates to lower monthly payments and less total interest paid over the loan term.
  • Tax deduction: If you itemize your tax deductions, you could deduct the cost of points.

Cons of mortgage points

  • Upfront cost: You’ll have to pay for points upfront at closing. This increases the initial cost of your mortgage.
  • Might not always save you money: The benefits of mortgage points only kick in after the savings from the lower interest rate surpass the cost of the points — known as the breakeven point. If you sell or refinance your home before this point, you won’t realize the financial benefit.

Should you buy down your interest rate with points?

I’m ambivalent about paying points — it strikes me as a lot of extra analysis without a big reward. — Jeff Ostrowski, Principal Writer, Bankrate

When you receive your mortgage loan offer, first clarify whether the stated quote requires you to pay points. If you can’t get that rate without paying points, you might want to ask for another quote that doesn’t require points. You can then compare the differences in rate.

For some, however, that exercise might not be worth their time, nor the relatively small amount of monthly savings.

“I’m ambivalent about paying points — it strikes me as a lot of extra analysis without a big reward,” says Jeff Ostrowski, principal writer for Bankrate. “But, if it’s very important to you to lower the rate over the life of your loan, and you have cash on hand to make it work, go ahead. Just make sure you’ll keep the mortgage long enough to recoup the upfront costs.”

That said, buying mortgage points might make sense in a few cases:

  • If you plan to be in the home for a long time: Because buying points on mortgages reduces the rate for the life of the loan, every dollar you spend on points goes further the longer you pay that mortgage. As a result, if you plan to be in the house for years to come, the amount you’ll save is likely to make the upfront cost worth it.
  • If you don’t plan to refinance any time soon: Generally, it’s not worth paying for points for a lower rate if you plan to refinance to a different rate before the breakeven point. If you know you’ll keep the mortgage for a long time, then points could still help you save.

The bottom line: If you’re not sure whether you should buy down your rate with points, do the math. It might make more financial sense to use the money you’d spend on points to make a bigger down payment, which would reduce the amount you’d need to borrow.

FAQ on mortgage points

  • Mortgage rates remain elevated, which might make mortgage points seem more attractive. However, the typical breakeven point now is five-plus years. If you don’t plan to stay in your home or keep your mortgage that long, it’s likely not worth buying points.
  • Whether you find a rate on a mortgage lender’s website or through a third party, the annual percentage rate, or APR, you see advertised might or might not include points. One rate might even seem attractively low, but that could be due to points already factored in that you might not want to pay. Be sure to read the fine print.
  • If you itemize tax deductions, you can deduct mortgage points as part of the mortgage interest deduction. These are tax-deductible on up to $750,000 of mortgage debt for homeowners who bought property after Dec. 15, 2017, or up to $1 million for those who purchased before that date. Origination points are not tax-deductible.