The biggest advantage of a reverse mortgage is that making monthly payments is optional, as long as you keep your property taxes, insurance, and upkeep current. The loan can even pay you each month. The loan balance only comes due when the last borrower dies or leaves the home.
Taking out a reverse mortgage early – homeowners become eligible once they turn 62 – can help boost retirement savings, and maximize the benefits via a guaranteed-to-grow line of credit on any unused funds.
But what if you take out a reverse mortgage, only to see interest rates drop a few years down the road? Are you stuck with the higher rate?
Not necessarily. You can refinance a reverse mortgage, just as you can a traditional mortgage. A reverse mortgage refinance can be the right move if interest rates dropped, your home has appreciated significantly in value, or you want to add your spouse to the loan.
But there are pros and cons to refinancing a reverse mortgage. Learn what’s involved, including the related fees and steps required.
What is a reverse mortgage?
Unlike a forward mortgage, in which your equity increases as you make monthly payments on the loan, a reverse mortgage enables you to take money out of the home in the form of a lump sum, a line of credit, monthly cash advances, or a combination of monthly advances and a line of credit.
Fortunately, you don’t have to make payments on your reverse mortgage, said Khari Washington, a real estate and mortgage broker with 1 st United Realty Mortgage, Inc., in Riverside, California. Instead, the money has to be repaid when you leave or sell the home.
You can continue to make payments if you choose. Continue reading