How Refinancing Can Affect Your Credit

It hardly seems possible that mortgage rates can get much lower, but they have. Homeowners are taking notice and refinancing their mortgages. Freddie Mac reports that 30-year fixed-rate mortgages have reached an all-time record low at 3.4 percent for the week ending September 27, 2012, down from last week’s 3.49 percent.

So if you’re on the fence because you are afraid that refinancing (again) will hurt your credit, relax.

“It will neither help nor hurt your score in the short-term,” insists Anthony Sprauve, director of public relations for myFICO.com. “Any impact will be minimal and brief.  The true impact will be how you manage the new mortgage over time.”

While that makes refinancing sound like a no-brainer, there are a couple of potential traps you’ll want to watch out for.

The first is the impact of shopping for a new loan on your credit scores. Each time you apply for credit, that “inquiry” into your credit history. “The typical additional inquiry can be expected to lower a credit score by five points or less,” says Barry Paperno, a credit scoring industry veteran and manager of the Credit.com forums.

But in the case of mortgage loan inquiries, “you can incur any number over a focused period of time, such as 14 or 45 days, and they will only count as one inquiry,” Paperno explains. “Also, while on your credit report for two years, inquiries are counted for only the first year by the credit scoring models.”

Steve Ely, CEO of eCredable.com agrees, adding: “Like most things in the science of credit scoring, the thicker your credit file, the smaller the impact on your credit score.”

The take-away? If you are going to shop for a new lower-rate home loan, it’s a good idea to do so in a relatively short period of time.

The other risk when you refinance? A missed mortgage payment. While this trap isn’t common, if you’re affected you can see a significant drop on your scores.

It works like this: You are approved for a new loan to pay off the current loan. Your loan officer that tells you that you can skip this month’s payment on your current loan because the new loan will take care of it. That’s true — provided the loan closes and funds on time. But if the payment from the new lender arrives more than 30 days after your current payment to your “old” lender was due, that lender may consider that last payment late. And one late payment can really hurt your scores.

So keep an eye on the calendar and if it looks like you might be cutting it close, talk with your lender and loan officer about making that mortgage payment to keep your good credit intact.

If all goes smoothly, though, your credit report should list the old loan as paid in full with a zero balance. Pay the new loan on time and your credit will be just fine. Not to mention your budget. (You can check your credit score using a free tool like Credit.com’s Credit Report Card, which gives you your score plus a breakdown of the major components of your credit score – payment history, credit usage, length of credit history, mix of credit and new credit – to see what areas you need to work on. And it’s equally important to check your credit reports, which you can get for free every year.)

[Student Loans: Research and compare options for student loans at Credit.com]

Image: Dan Previte, via Flickr

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