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Home Refinances Jump As Homeowners Look For New Deals

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Published Feb 11, 2026
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A set of house keys, a contract, and a calculator sit on a table outside, suggesting new deals for buyers, with two suburban houses and a parked car visible in the background.
Summary:
    • Refinances are way up. Activity jumped compared to last year as borrowers hunt for any way to cut monthly payments.
    • FHA loans offer a rate edge. They typically run a quarter-point below conventional mortgages, which adds up over time.
    • The insurance trade-off. FHA requires upfront and ongoing premiums, but for borrowers stuck with higher rates, it's still worth running the numbers.

Rates haven't budged much lately. So borrowers are getting creative about cutting costs anywhere they can.

That's pushing both FHA loan applications and refinances higher.

The Refinance Rush

Refinance activity jumped 81% compared to last year, driven partly by FHA refinances climbing 12% in a single week.

Why the FHA surge? The rate advantage.

Every Quarter Point Counts

FHA loans typically run about 0.125% to 0.25% below conventional mortgages.

That might not sound like much, but on a $300,000 loan, that quarter-point saves you roughly $49 monthly.

Over 30 years? Nearly $18,000.

The Insurance Trade-Off

The trade-off is mortgage insurance. FHA loans require 1.75% upfront plus 0.55% annually, and for most borrowers, that insurance never goes away unless you refinance into something else.

Still, when rates are stuck in the 6% range and nobody expects them dropping to pandemic lows anytime soon, borrowers are doing the math.

A slightly lower rate plus manageable insurance beats sitting on a 7% mortgage from last year.

What It Means

The bigger picture: mortgage activity is picking up because people are working with what's available rather than waiting for rates to fall. Sometimes the move isn't dramatic.

It's just cheaper than doing nothing.

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