Refinancing looks simple on the surface. Rates fall, lenders advertise lower monthly payments, and borrowers try to gauge whether they should reset their mortgage. The common rule of thumb tends to be: “If the new rate is meaningfully lower, refinancing is a good idea.”
This shortcut often leads people to compare only the headline rate or the difference in total interest paid. Both are incomplete. A refinance is a capital allocation decision, and like any decision involving future cash flows, it needs to be evaluated in today’s dollars through a clear net present value (NPV) analysis.
This post walks through a step-by-step, first-principles framework to objectively determine whether refinancing makes sense — and which option delivers higher economic value.
Why Present Value Matters More Than the Interest Rate
A refinance changes two variables simultaneously:
1. Your monthly payment stream
2. Your future outstanding balance at different points in time
Closing costs are paid upfront, in today’s dollars. The benefit of the refinance arrives gradually, through lower payments or shorter amortization.
Therefore, the only rigorous way to compare options is to convert everything into a common base — present value — and compare the NPV of each alternative.
This is especially important because borrowers rarely refinance into a mortgage with the same remaining term. Someone 6 years into a 30-year mortgage must choose between a new 30-year or a new 15-year term. Those maturities are not inherently comparable without discounting cash flows.
The Example: A Realistic Borrower Situation
Assume the following starting point:
- Current mortgage: 30-year fixed
- Interest rate: 4.25%
- Remaining term: 24 years
- Current balance: $355,247
- Current monthly payment (P+I): $1,965.79
Two refinancing choices are available:
- New 30-year fixed at 3.625%
- New 15-year fixed at 3.375%
Both have lower interest rates, but different maturities.
Which is objectively better in today’s dollars?
Part I: NPV Analysis for the New 30-Year Option
Step 1: Present value of future balance difference
At the 24-year mark (when the current mortgage ends), the new 30-year mortgage will still have $103,389 remaining.
Discount that future balance back at 3.625%:
- PV of remaining balance = $43,597
- This is a net negative, because the borrower would owe money on the new mortgage at the point the current one would have been fully paid.
Step 2: Present value of payment differences
New monthly payment at 3.625% for 30 years: $1,620.11
Savings vs. current payment: $345.69 per month for 24 years
The PV of these savings at 3.625% is:
- PV of payment savings = $66,573
- This is a net positive to the borrower.
Step 3: Net present value
NPV = $66,573 – $43,597 = $22,976
Even though total interest paid over the life of the new 30-year loan is about $15,100 higher, the NPV of reduced payments dominates.
The refinance has positive economic value.
Part II: NPV Analysis for the New 15-Year Option
Step 1: Present value of future balance difference
In 15 years (when the new 15-year mortgage ends), the current mortgage would still have $177,501 outstanding.
Discounting at 3.375%:
- PV of remaining balance = $107,887
- This is a net positive, because the refinanced mortgage would be fully paid off at year 15.
Step 2: Present value of payment differences
New 15-year monthly payment: $2,517.85
Increase vs. current payment: $552.05 per month
PV of these higher payments at 3.375%:
- PV of payment increase = $77,890
- This is a net negative, reflecting the heavier near-term cash outflow.
Step 3: Net present value
NPV = $107,887 – $77,890 = $29,997
This NPV is higher than the 30-year refinance.
Which Option Is Better?
Comparing NPVs:
- NPV of 30-year refinance: $22,976
- NPV of 15-year refinance: $29,997
The 15-year option yields $7,021 more value in today’s dollars.
Both refinances add positive value.
But the 15-year option generates the higher expected value if the borrower can afford the higher monthly payments.
This answers the only question that truly matters:
Which refinance option increases the borrower’s net worth the most in present-value terms?
Closing Costs and Real-World Constraints
Even though closing costs can be rolled into the new mortgage, they are still paid with today’s dollars.
This framework allows a clean comparison between:
- Upfront costs
- Present value of future savings
- Differences in mortgage maturity
- Timing of principal reduction
If the NPV of a refinance meaningfully exceeds closing costs, refinancing is economically justified. If not, even a lower interest rate can be a poor decision.
A First-Principles Lesson for Borrowers
Consumers often focus on the wrong signals: interest rates, loan term length, or total interest paid.
A refinance is not about “paying less interest.” It is a discounted cash flow problem.
By structuring the decision as an NPV analysis, borrowers gain:
- A clear, objective comparison between mismatched loan terms
- A precise measure of value creation
- A framework that accounts for timing, cash flow pressure, and opportunity cost
In short: A refinance only makes sense if it increases your net worth in today’s dollars.
All amortization calculations were performed using:
- Standard mortgage formulas
- Continuous monthly compounding assumptions
- Fixed-rate, fully amortizing payment structures
Disclaimer: Nothing here should be considered investment advice. All investments carry risks, including possible loss of principal and fluctuation in value. Finomenon Investments LLC cannot guarantee future financial results.





