- Steven Gilbert
- May 14, 2026
- in Planning
What Are Mortgage Points?
When people hear the term “mortgage points,” they often think of them as some kind of mysterious fee. In reality, points are mostly a pricing mechanism lenders use to adjust the interest rate on your loan.
At its core, mortgage points are a tradeoff:
- Lower Up front costs but a Higher Rate
- Higher Up Front Costs but a Lower Rate
Points are how lenders move you along that spectrum.
How Mortgage Pricing Actually Works
There is usually a “base” or “par” rate available for a mortgage. This is the rate where the lender is neither charging significant discount points nor giving significant lender credits.
From there:
- If you want a lower interest rate, you typically pay points
- If you accept a higher interest rate, the lender may provide credits toward closing costs
This is important because many borrowers assume there is only “the rate.” In reality, there are often many versions of the same loan available simultaneously.
For example:
| Rate | Points/Credits |
|---|---|
| 6.50% | Lender gives $3,000 credit |
| 6.25% | No points/no credits |
| 6.00% | Borrower pays $4,000 |
| 5.75% | Borrower pays $8,000 |
All of these could exist at the same time for the same borrower.
The lender is essentially asking:
“How would you like to structure the cost of borrowing? Upfront or over time?”
What a Point Means
Typically, 1 point = 1% of the loan amount.
For example, if you have a $300,000 mortgage and pay 1 point, that will equate to about $3,000.
What do you get?
A point is not automatically tied to a specific rate reduction. The market determines how much rate improvement you receive for the cost.
Sometimes 1 point may lower the rate by 0.25%. \
Sometimes only 0.125%
Sometimes more
How to Compare Mortgage Offers Properly
One of the biggest mistakes borrowers make is comparing only the interest rate. A lower rate does not automatically mean a better loan.
You must compare:
- Interest rate
- Points paid
- Lender credits received
- Total closing costs
- Expected time in the loan
This is why asking for the “zero-point” or “par” rate can be extremely helpful. That gives you the cleanest baseline for comparison.
From there, you can evaluate:
- What it costs to buy the rate down
- How much monthly savings you receive
- How long it takes to recover the cost
Calculating Breakeven
The simplest way to evaluate points is through breakeven analysis.
This is done by taking the cost of the points paid and dividing it by the reduction in the monthly payment.
For example, if you paid $3,000 in points and it reduces your payment by $100 per month, the breakeven is 30 months or 2.5 years.
When Paying Points Often Makes More Sense
Paying points may be more attractive when:
- You expect to keep the mortgage for many years
- You are unlikely to refinance
- Rates are relatively high and a reduction meaningfully lowers payments
- You highly value lower fixed monthly obligations
- You have sufficient cash reserves after closing
When Paying Points May Be Less Attractive
Points may be less beneficial when:
- You may move within a few years
- You expect rates to fall and refinance later
- You plan to aggressively pay down the loan
- You may recast the mortgage after a large principal payment
- Cash reserves are already tight
- The lender is charging substantial points for very little rate reduction