- What a Mortgage Rate Buydown Actually Is
- Permanent Buydown vs Temporary Buydown
- The Break-Even Math That Decides Everything
- When Paying Points Usually Makes Sense
- When Paying Points Usually Does Not Make Sense
- What About a 2-1 Buydown?
- Questions to Ask the Lender Before You Buy Down the Rate
- When This Matters Most
- The Bottom Line
- Sources reviewed
Your lender offers a lower interest rate if you pay points upfront. The pitch sounds clean: spend money once, save money every month, easy win.
Need the bigger picture first? Start with the Mortgage & Refinance Guide for Homeowners.
Not so fast. A rate buydown only works when the upfront cost is justified by how long you will keep the loan. If you move, refinance, or sell too soon, you lit cash on fire.
Quick answer: Paying discount points makes sense only if the monthly savings beat the upfront cost before you expect to sell, refinance, or pay off the mortgage. If you will not stay long enough to hit break-even, skip it.
Buydown decision filter
- Usually worth it if you are buying a long-term home, the seller is covering points, or the break-even is comfortably shorter than your expected time in the loan.
- Usually not worth it if you may refinance within a few years, you need the cash for reserves, or the lender is charging a lot for a tiny rate cut.
- Be careful with temporary 2-1 buydowns. They lower the early payment, but the loan still snaps back to the full rate later.
What a Mortgage Rate Buydown Actually Is
A buydown means paying money upfront to reduce your interest rate. On a standard permanent buydown, you usually buy discount points. One point costs 1% of the loan amount.
On a $400,000 mortgage, one point costs $4,000. In exchange, the lender may lower the rate by about 0.25%, sometimes more, sometimes less. There is no universal pricing. You have to compare the quote.
Permanent Buydown vs Temporary Buydown
Permanent buydown: You pay upfront, the rate stays lower for the life of the loan.
Temporary buydown: Usually structured as 3-2-1 or 2-1. The payment is reduced for the first few years, then rises to the full note rate. These are often funded by the seller or builder.
Temporary buydowns can help with cash flow during the first couple of years, but they do not fix an unaffordable house. If the permanent payment will hurt, a buydown is lipstick on a bad decision.
The Break-Even Math That Decides Everything
This is the whole game. Divide the upfront point cost by the monthly savings.
Example: you pay $4,000 in points and save $92 per month. Break-even is about 44 months.
If you expect to keep that loan for 7 to 10 years, great. If you think rates may drop and you will refinance in 2 years, terrible trade.
Run the full monthly payment through the Mortgage Calculator, then compare it against your long-term plan, not just the teaser savings on the loan estimate.
When Paying Points Usually Makes Sense
You are keeping the mortgage for a long time. The longer you stay, the more likely the savings outrun the upfront cost.
The seller or builder is paying. If someone else is funding the buydown through a concession, the math gets much better.
You already have solid reserves. Buying down a rate with your last available cash is dumb. Use extra money to protect your emergency fund first.
You are right on the edge of affordability. A lower rate can improve payment comfort, but only if the house still works without fantasy budgeting. Check that with the How Much House Can You Actually Afford? framework.
When Paying Points Usually Does Not Make Sense
You may refinance soon. If you think rates will drop and you will refinance again, do not prepay for a rate you may not keep.
You need the cash elsewhere. Cash at closing can cover reserves, moving costs, repairs, or avoiding credit card debt. Those may beat a small rate reduction.
The break-even is too long. If it takes 6 or 7 years to recover the cost, a lot can change before then.
The lender’s point pricing is weak. Sometimes they want thousands for a tiny savings. Shop it.
What About a 2-1 Buydown?
This is common in slower markets. Year 1 payment is based on a rate 2% lower, year 2 is 1% lower, then the loan resets to the full note rate.
It can be useful if income is rising soon or you need short-term breathing room. It is dangerous if you are only qualifying because of the temporary payment. Underwrite your life based on the fully indexed payment, not the honeymoon version.
Warning: Never use a temporary buydown to justify buying more house than you can afford at the full payment. That is how payment shock turns into forced selling.
Questions to Ask the Lender Before You Buy Down the Rate
- How much does each rate option cost in points?
- What is the exact monthly savings versus the no-point option?
- How long is the break-even period?
- Is the buydown permanent or temporary?
- Could I keep that cash instead and still comfortably afford the home?
When This Matters Most
- You are comparing multiple loan estimates and one lender is pushing points hard.
- A builder or seller is offering to fund a temporary buydown.
- You are cash-heavy but payment-sensitive and want to know the smartest use of your money.
- You expect rates to move and do not want to overpay for a loan you may refinance out of.
The Bottom Line
A mortgage rate buydown is not automatically smart or dumb. It is a timing decision. If the savings beat the upfront cost well before you expect to exit the loan, it can be a good move. If not, keep the cash.
Next step: Ask your lender for side-by-side quotes with zero points, partial points, and full points. Then compare the monthly savings and break-even period against how long you realistically expect to keep the mortgage.
Related: Understanding Closing Costs
Sources reviewed
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau mortgage guidance
- HUD home buying and mortgage servicing guidance
- Fannie Mae consumer mortgage references
- Freddie Mac My Home mortgage guidance
Keep Reading
Official resources and reference points
This page is homeowner education, not a property-specific appraisal, legal opinion, tax advice, or lender/carrier instruction. Use these when you need the real consumer rules behind PMI, escrow, refinance timing, or mortgage math, not just rate-shop marketing.
See the reviewer profile and editorial team profile for who does what. OwnerHacks publishes homeowner education, not property-specific appraisal work, legal advice, tax advice, lending advice, or insurance advice.
OwnerHacks updates articles when rules, costs, or homeowner decision factors materially change. If something looks outdated, use our contact page and we will review it.




