Realtor.com®: Shopping Around for a Lender Could Save Borrowers Up to $44,000 Over the Life of a 30-Year Loan
Realtor.com®: Shopping Around for a Lender Could Save Borrowers Up to $44,000 Over the Life of a 30-Year Loan |
| [23-October-2025] |
Analysis of 2 million loans shows improving your credit score and boosting your down payment can also offset market factors in shaping mortgage costs AUSTIN, Texas, Oct. 23, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Mortgage rates may move with the market, but a new Realtor.com® analysis of nearly 2 million mortgage originations shows that borrowers can play a bigger role in shaping their own costs than many may realize, even in a high-rate environment. In the third quarter of 2024, for example, when the average mortgage rate was 6.60%, borrowers with stronger lending profiles secured rates as low as 6.25%, while others paid closer to 7.0%. On a $425,000 median-priced home with a 30-year fixed rate, borrowers at the low end of that range will save more than $60,000 over the life of the loan compared with buyers at the high end. "After years of higher borrowing costs, even small rate improvements can open doors for more buyers," said Danielle Hale, chief economist at Realtor.com®. "While mortgage rates are expected to ease as the Fed cuts its policy rate, homebuyers who adjust the key factors that influence their individual borrowing costs can make the most of this or any moment." Borrower Decisions Drive $300-$3,330 in Annual Savings "Not all improvements have the same payoff," said Jake Krimmel, senior economist at Realtor.com®. "The data show that hitting key thresholds, like moving from 'good' to 'very good' credit or putting 20% down, matters more than chasing perfection. Even modest adjustments in the right areas can shift a buyer's rate enough to save tens of thousands over the life of a loan." Comparing Lenders Has the Biggest Impact on Rates, Saving Borrowers up to $44,000 To put that in perspective, for a buyer putting 20% down on a $425,000 median-priced home, a 6.05% rate versus a 6.6% rate—a 0.55-point spread—equates to $122 in monthly savings, $1,464 per year, and $43,929 over the life of the loan. Unlike raising a credit score or doubling a down payment, shopping around is an opportunity that's available to every borrower, regardless of financial position, especially for those planning to purchase during the seasonal Best Time to Buy, when listings, prices, and competition typically align most favorably. Key Credit and Down Payment Milestones Can Save Borrowers More than $100,000 in Loan Payments Down payments, while harder to change, can have a much larger impact. Crossing the 20% down payment threshold produced more than twice the rate benefit of smaller down payment increases. For the same median-priced home, moving from a 10% to 20% down payment not only reduces the loan amount but also improves the rate by an average of 0.09 basis points. Together, those factors add up to about $281 in monthly savings, $3,372 per year, and $101,355 over the life of the loan. While these savings are significant, doubling a down payment, which means an extra $42,500 at today's home price, can be a difficult step for buyers. That's why understanding other levers — such as improving credit or comparing lenders — remains essential for affordability, especially for first-time or cost-sensitive buyers. Borrowers Pay More for Investment and Nontraditional Properties "Even in a challenging homebuying market with sustained high mortgage rates, there's room for strategy," Krimmel said. "Focusing on what you can control — improving credit, saving more, and comparing offers — can make a measurable difference in affordability." Methodology Specifically, we employ an Ordinary Least Squares regression model predicting an individual borrower's actual received mortgage rate as a function of various borrower and property characteristics. The characteristics include the following: borrower FICO score, cumulative loan-to-value, debt-to-income ratio, original loan amount, property type, units in the structure, loan purpose, occupancy status, number of co-borrowers, loan term, loan channel, first-time homebuyer status, the 10-year Treasury yield during the month of origination, the metropolitan area or state of origination, lender name, calendar month of origination, and quarter of origination. The full set of regression model results are available upon request. About Realtor.com® Media contact: press@realtor.com
SOURCE Realtor.com | ||
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