Cash-Out Refinance Rates
Cash-Out Refinance Rates: what to know and how to act in 2026.
What to know
Cash-out refinance rates run modestly higher than rate-and-term rates - often about 0.125-0.5% more - because pulling equity raises the lender's risk. The exact bump depends on your loan-to-value and credit. Even so, a cash-out rate is usually far cheaper than a personal loan or credit card for accessing home equity.
What affects your refinance rate
- Your credit score and loan-to-value
- Loan term (15-year prices below 30-year)
- Rate-and-term vs cash-out (cash-out prices higher)
- Discount points you choose to buy
- The bond market and Fed policy — and lender margins, so compare quotes
Example payment by rate
| Rate | P&I on a $300,000 loan (30-yr) |
|---|---|
| 5.25% | $1,657 |
| 5.50% | $1,703 |
| 5.75% | $1,751 |
| 6.00% | $1,799 |
| 6.25% | $1,847 |
| 6.50% | $1,896 |
| 6.75% | $1,946 |
Rates move daily. Join the free Refi Rate Guide alerts so you can lock when rates clear your break-even.
Catch the Next Refinance Rate Drop
Join the free Refi Rate Guide alert list — we watch rates, cash-out rules, and new programs so you do not have to.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Cash-Out Refinance Rates — the quick answer?
- Cash-out refinance rates run modestly higher than rate-and-term rates - often about 0.125-0.5% more - because pulling equity raises the lender's risk. The exact bump depends on your loan-to-value and credit. Even so, a cash-out rate is usually far cheaper than a personal loan or credit card for accessing home equity.
- Are refinance rates higher than purchase rates?
- Rate-and-term refinance rates are usually similar to purchase rates; cash-out refinances price a bit higher because they are riskier for the lender.
