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Recasting a Mortgage

Recasting a mortgage lets you put a lump sum toward your principal and have your lender recalculate a lower monthly payment — without changing your interest rate or your payoff date. Here's exactly how it works, what it costs, and how to know if it's right for you.

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What does recasting a mortgage mean?

Recasting a mortgage — also called re-amortization — is the process of making a large one-time payment toward your loan's principal and having your lender recalculate, or "recast," your remaining payments. After the lump sum is applied, the servicer spreads your new, smaller balance across the same remaining term at the same interest rate. The result is a lower required monthly payment while everything else about your loan stays exactly the same.

This is the part that confuses most homeowners, so it's worth being precise: a recast does not change your interest rate, and it does not change your payoff date. It only lowers the monthly principal-and-interest portion of your payment. You're not getting a new loan — you're keeping your existing one and resetting the math on a smaller balance. That's why recasting is so appealing to anyone holding a low fixed rate they'd never want to give up by refinancing. For a deeper definition and a worked example, see what is mortgage recasting.

How the mortgage recasting process works, step by step

The mechanics are simpler than refinancing. There's no underwriting, no appraisal, and no credit pull. Here's the full process from start to finish:

  1. Confirm eligibility with your servicer. Call your loan servicer and ask whether your mortgage can be recast. Most conventional loans backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac qualify; government-backed loans usually don't (more on that below).
  2. Ask for the minimum and the fee. Get the minimum lump sum your lender requires — commonly $5,000 to $10,000 — and the one-time recast fee, typically $150 to $500.
  3. Make the lump-sum principal payment. Send the qualifying amount and confirm in writing that it's applied to principal, not to your next scheduled payments.
  4. Submit the recast request and pay the fee. Complete the servicer's recast form and pay the one-time charge.
  5. Receive your new schedule. The servicer re-amortizes the smaller balance over the same remaining term and sends a new payment schedule. Your lower payment usually takes effect within 30 to 45 days.

Want the process broken down in even more detail with timelines and servicer scripts? Our dedicated how to recast a mortgage guide walks through each step.

What does it cost to recast a mortgage?

Recasting is one of the cheapest ways to lower a mortgage payment. The only direct cost is a one-time recast fee, which generally falls between $150 and $500 — $250 is a common figure. Compare that with refinancing, where closing costs typically run 2% to 6% of the loan balance. On a $350,000 loan, that's $7,000 to $21,000 in closing costs versus a couple hundred dollars to recast.

The other "cost" is the lump sum itself — but that money isn't gone. It goes straight to your principal, reducing the balance you owe and the interest you'll pay over the life of the loan. In effect, recasting converts cash you already have into a guaranteed, tax-free return equal to your mortgage rate.

Who is eligible to recast?

Eligibility comes down to your loan type and your servicer's policy. As a general rule:

  • Conventional loans (Fannie Mae / Freddie Mac): usually eligible.
  • Many jumbo loans: often eligible, but policies vary widely by investor.
  • FHA, VA, and USDA loans: generally cannot be recast. If you have one of these, see recasting FHA, VA, and USDA loans for the alternatives.

Beyond loan type, your servicer sets the minimum lump sum and may require that your payments are current. Because policies differ by lender, it's worth checking our lender recast policies table for minimums and fees by servicer before you commit.

Pros and cons of recasting a mortgage

Recasting isn't right for everyone. Weighing the trade-offs honestly is the best way to decide:

The advantages

  • You keep your interest rate. No giving up a low fixed rate to chase a lower payment.
  • Low cost. A small one-time fee instead of thousands in closing costs.
  • No credit check. Recasting doesn't appear as a new loan and has no impact on your credit score.
  • Lower required payment. Useful for improving monthly cash flow or qualifying for the loan in retirement.

The drawbacks

  • It ties up cash. The lump sum goes into home equity, which is far less liquid than savings or investments.
  • It won't shorten your loan. Your payoff date stays the same; if your goal is to be debt-free sooner, extra payments may serve you better.
  • Not all loans qualify. Government-backed loans are usually excluded.
  • Opportunity cost. If your rate is low, investing the lump sum might earn more over time.

When does recasting make sense?

Recasting tends to be the right call when three things are true at once: you hold a low fixed interest rate you'd rather keep than refinance away, you've received a windfall — an inheritance, a work bonus, or proceeds from selling another property — and your goal is a lower monthly payment rather than the fastest possible payoff. A common scenario: you bought a new home before selling your old one, and once the old home sells you want to apply the proceeds to bring the new payment down without refinancing into a higher rate.

If, on the other hand, current market rates are well below your rate, refinancing might save more even after closing costs — run both in our mortgage recast vs. refinance comparison. And if your rate is already low, putting the lump sum to work in the market could come out ahead; weigh that trade-off against the guaranteed return of recasting.

Recasting vs. your other options

Recasting is one of three common ways to use a lump sum against a mortgage, and each does something different:

Option Monthly payment Payoff date Interest rate Cost
Recast Lower Same Same $150–$500 fee
Refinance Depends on new rate New term New rate 2–6% of balance
Extra principal payments Same Earlier Same None

The choice depends on your goal. Want lower payments while keeping a great rate? Recast. Want a fundamentally lower rate? Refinance. Want to be mortgage-free sooner? Make extra principal payments. Use the calculator above to see your exact recasting numbers, then compare paths with our decision tools.

Recasting a mortgage: frequently asked questions

What is a mortgage recast? +

A mortgage recast is when you make a large lump-sum payment toward your loan principal and your lender re-amortizes the loan over the remaining term at the same interest rate. Your monthly payment drops, but your rate and payoff date stay the same. It typically costs a one-time fee of $150–$500.

How does a mortgage recast calculator work? +

You enter your current loan balance, interest rate, remaining term, and the lump sum you plan to pay. The calculator subtracts the lump sum from your balance and re-amortizes the remaining amount over the same term and rate, then shows your new monthly payment, total interest saved, and how quickly the recast fee pays for itself.

What is a recast fee and how much does it cost? +

A recast fee is the one-time charge your lender applies to re-amortize the loan. It usually ranges from $150 to $500, with $250 being common. Compared with refinancing, which can cost 2–6% of the loan in closing costs, a recast is far cheaper.

Does the interest rate change during a recast? +

No. A recast keeps your existing interest rate. This is the main reason recasting is attractive when you hold a low rate you do not want to give up by refinancing.

Does the loan term change after a recast? +

No. Your payoff date stays the same. Recasting lowers the monthly payment by spreading a smaller balance over the same remaining term; it does not extend or shorten the loan.

Which loan types cannot be recast? +

Government-backed loans (FHA, VA, and USDA) generally cannot be recast. Most conventional loans (Fannie Mae / Freddie Mac) and many jumbo loans can be. Always confirm with your specific servicer.

What is the minimum lump sum required to recast? +

Minimums vary by lender but commonly fall between $5,000 and $10,000. For example, UWM requires $5,000 and some lenders require $10,000. Your servicer sets the exact minimum.

When is the best time to recast? +

Recasting makes the most sense when you have a low fixed rate worth keeping, you receive a windfall (inheritance, bonus, or proceeds from selling another property), and you want a lower required monthly payment rather than a faster payoff.

How is recasting different from refinancing? +

Refinancing replaces your loan with a new one: new rate, new term, credit check, and 2–6% closing costs. Recasting keeps your existing loan, rate, and term, costs only a small fee, and requires no credit check. Refinancing can change your rate; recasting cannot.

How is recasting different from making extra principal payments? +

Extra principal payments keep your monthly payment the same and shorten the loan. Recasting lowers your required monthly payment while keeping the same payoff date. A recast typically requires both a lump sum and a formal re-amortization with a fee.

How do I request a recast from my lender? +

Contact your loan servicer and ask whether your loan is eligible for recasting (also called re-amortization). If yes, make the qualifying lump-sum principal payment, submit the recast request, and pay the fee. The servicer re-amortizes the loan and sends you the new payment schedule.

How long does a mortgage recast take? +

A recast typically takes 30 to 45 days from the time you submit the request and lump-sum payment until the new, lower monthly payment takes effect.

Does recasting affect my credit score? +

No. Recasting does not involve a credit check or a new loan, so it has no direct impact on your credit score.

Can I recast more than once? +

Some lenders allow multiple recasts over the life of a loan, each with its own fee and minimum. Others limit how often you can recast. Check your servicer’s policy.

What happens to my escrow after a recast? +

A recast changes only the principal-and-interest portion of your payment. Your escrow for taxes and insurance is handled separately, so your total monthly payment may differ slightly from the principal-and-interest figure shown here.