Mortgage Points Calculator — Is Buying Points Worth It?
Calculate the break-even period for buying mortgage discount points. Compare 0, 1, and 2 points side by side and see if buying points saves money based on how long you keep the loan.
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Upfront Cost of Points
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Monthly Payment Savings —
Break-Even Period —
Total Savings Over Loan Life —
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown ▾
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Monthly Savings
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Break-Even (months) —
Break-Even (years) —
Net Savings Over Loan Life —
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail ▾
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Upfront Cost of Points
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After-Tax Cost of Points —
Monthly Payment Savings —
Break-Even Period —
Net Savings/Loss If Selling Early —
Opportunity Cost (invested instead) —
NPV of Savings (vs opportunity cost) —
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How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your Loan Amount, Current Rate, and Points to Buy.
- Adjust the rate reduction per point (default 0.25%).
- View the Break-Even Period — if you keep the loan longer, points are profitable.
- Use the Compare 0/1/2 Points tab to see all scenarios side by side.
- Use the Professional tab for tax deductibility, opportunity cost, and early-sale loss.
Formula
Point Cost = Loan Amount × Points ÷ 100
Monthly Savings = Payment(old rate) − Payment(new rate)
Break-Even = Point Cost ÷ Monthly Savings
Net Savings = Monthly Savings × Loan Term Months − Point Cost
Monthly Savings = Payment(old rate) − Payment(new rate)
Break-Even = Point Cost ÷ Monthly Savings
Net Savings = Monthly Savings × Loan Term Months − Point Cost
Example
Example: $350,000 loan at 7.0%. Buy 2 points for $7,000 to reduce rate to 6.5%. Old payment: $2,329/mo. New payment: $2,212/mo. Monthly savings = $117. Break-even = $7,000 ÷ $117 = 60 months (5 years). If you stay 30 years, total savings = ~$35,000.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Mortgage points (discount points) are upfront fees paid to reduce your interest rate. Each point costs 1% of the loan amount and typically reduces your rate by 0.25%. On a $400,000 loan, 1 point = $4,000 upfront.
- Break-Even = Upfront Cost ÷ Monthly Savings. If you pay $8,000 for points and save $100/month, break-even is 80 months (~6.7 years). If you sell or refinance before then, you lose money on the points.
- Yes, in many cases. Points paid on a primary home purchase are typically fully deductible in the year paid if you itemize deductions. Points paid on refinancing must be deducted ratably over the life of the loan.
- Probably not. If your break-even is 7 years and you sell in 5, you lose money. The longer you stay in the home, the more beneficial points become.
Related Calculators
Sources & References (5) ▾
- CFPB — What are discount points and lender credits? — Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
- IRS — Topic 504: Home Mortgage Points — Internal Revenue Service
- Freddie Mac — Mortgage Points and Rate Buydowns — Freddie Mac
- HUD — Mortgage Points Guidance — U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
- CFPB — Closing Disclosure Explainer — Consumer Financial Protection Bureau