How to compare refinance options without chasing the lowest rate
Use a simple refinance comparison process to decide whether a new mortgage actually improves your payment, payoff timeline, and long-term cost.
Focused Financial Planning
Plan payments, compare refinance options, and build a debt payoff path with a smaller set of calculators designed to work together.
Plan monthly payments, debt payoff timelines, and borrowing costs with focused loan calculators built for real repayment decisions.
Model refinance savings, payoff speed, and overpayment scenarios with mortgage calculators focused on homeowner decisions.
Estimate monthly payment, total interest, and long-term borrowing cost before you accept a loan.
Find your payoff date, pressure-test your payment plan, and compare payoff strategies before you commit.
See whether refinancing or overpaying actually improves your household cash flow and long-term cost.
These are the six pages the site now treats as its main decision pages.
Calculate loan interest and the amortization schedule.
Estimate how long it will take to pay off your debt.
Calculate payments and interest for a home equity line of credit.
Estimate savings from refinancing your mortgage.
Calculate how quickly you can pay off your mortgage.
Estimate savings from making extra mortgage payments.
These additional tools stay inside the Loan and Mortgage decision flow, but the site now prioritizes the pages below as its main planning hub.
Estimate your debt payoff time using the snowball method.
Estimate your debt payoff time using the avalanche method.
Calculate monthly payment and total cost for a personal loan.
Calculate your home equity.
Compare the cost of renting vs buying a home.
Calculate annual property tax based on home value and rate.
Short, high-intent guides that connect directly to the calculators above.
Use a simple refinance comparison process to decide whether a new mortgage actually improves your payment, payoff timeline, and long-term cost.
Compare the snowball and avalanche debt strategies, understand the tradeoff between motivation and cost, and choose the payoff method you will actually stick with.
Compare HELOCs and personal loans by payment structure, rate risk, flexibility, and repayment shock before you borrow against your home.