Plain-English guide

What is a mortgage recast?

A mortgage recast lets you make a large lump-sum payment toward your loan principal and your lender recalculates your monthly payment — same rate, same payoff date, lower payment.

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Mortgage recast: the definition

A mortgage recast is a one-time re-amortization of your existing home loan after you pay down a chunk of the principal. You hand your servicer a lump sum, they apply it to the balance, and they recalculate the monthly payment so the smaller balance is spread across the same remaining term at your same interest rate. The result is a lower required monthly payment, no new loan, and no change to your payoff date. The only cost is a one-time recast fee, usually $150–$500.

People search for this idea a few different ways — “what is a mortgage recast,” “what is recasting a mortgage,” “what is mortgage recasting,” and “what is a recast mortgage.” They all describe the same thing: re-amortizing a loan around a reduced balance instead of replacing the loan.

A worked example

Numbers make it concrete. Say you owe a $350,000 balance at 6.5% with 25 years (300 months) left. Your principal-and-interest payment is roughly $2,363 a month.

Now you come into $30,000 — an inheritance, a bonus, proceeds from selling another property — and you apply it as a recast. Your balance falls to $320,000, and your lender re-amortizes that amount over the same 25 years at the same 6.5%. The new payment is about $2,161 a month — roughly $200 less every month, for as long as you hold the loan. You keep your 6.5% rate, you keep your original payoff date, and you pay a single recast fee (commonly around $250) instead of thousands in closing costs.

Want to run your own numbers? The calculator below shows your new payment, total interest saved, and how fast the fee pays for itself.

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How recasting differs from refinancing

Recasting and refinancing both lower your payment, but they work in opposite ways. Refinancing replaces your loan with a brand-new one — new interest rate, new term, a credit check, and 2–6% of the balance in closing costs. Recasting keeps your existing loan exactly as it is, changing only the balance and the payment. If you hold a low fixed rate you don’t want to give up, a recast lets you cut your payment without surrendering that rate. If today’s market rates are well below yours, a refinance may save more despite the costs — our mortgage recast vs. refinance comparison runs both side by side.

How recasting differs from extra payments

Making extra principal payments and recasting both involve paying down the balance, but they target different goals. Extra payments keep your monthly payment the same and shorten the loan, saving interest by reaching payoff sooner. A recast lowers your required monthly payment while keeping the original payoff date. A recast also requires a formal re-amortization and a fee, whereas extra payments are just money applied to principal. Choose extra payments if your priority is being debt-free faster; choose a recast if your priority is freeing up cash flow each month.

Which loans can be recast

Most conventional loans backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac can be recast, and many jumbo loans can too. Government-backed loans — FHA, VA, and USDA — generally cannot be recast (more in our FHA, VA & USDA recast guide). Lenders set their own minimum lump sum, commonly $5,000 to $10,000, and policies vary, so confirm the exact terms with your servicer — see mortgage lender recast policies for minimums and fees by servicer. The process takes about 30–45 days and involves no credit check, so it won’t affect your credit score.

Is recasting right for you?

Recasting tends to make sense when three things line up: you hold a low fixed rate worth keeping, you’ve received a lump sum, and you’d rather lower your monthly payment than pay the loan off faster. To go deeper, see whether mortgage recasting is worth it, learn the step-by-step process for recasting a mortgage, or read the full overview of how a recast mortgage works.

Mortgage recast FAQ

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 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.

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.