The quick verdict
Recasting is worth it when three things line up: you hold a low fixed rate you don't want to lose, you have a lump sum to put toward principal, and you'd rather lower your monthly payment than pay the loan off faster. The fee is small ($150–$500) and the monthly savings usually pay it back within a few months. It's not worth it when your loan is ineligible, when you'd rather shorten the term, or when the lump sum would clearly do more invested.
When recasting IS worth it
- ✓ You have a low fixed interest rate worth protecting.
- ✓ You've received a windfall (inheritance, bonus, or proceeds from selling another property).
- ✓ You want a lower required monthly payment to ease cash flow.
- ✓ Your loan is a conventional (Fannie/Freddie) or eligible jumbo loan.
- ✓ You want to keep your same payoff date and rate, not reset the clock.
- ✓ You'd rather not pay 2–6% closing costs or undergo a credit check to refinance.
When recasting is NOT worth it
- ✗ You have an FHA, VA, or USDA loan: these generally cannot be recast.
- ✗ Your goal is to pay off the mortgage sooner: extra principal payments shorten the term instead.
- ✗ Today's market rates are well below your rate: a refinance may save more.
- ✗ The lump sum would earn meaningfully more invested, and you're comfortable with the risk.
- ✗ You don't have the minimum lump sum (commonly $5,000–$10,000).
- ✗ You might need the cash liquid soon: home equity is hard to tap quickly.
The break-even concept
The only cost of recasting is the one-time fee, so the break-even is simple: fee ÷ monthly savings = months to recoup. If a recast costs $250 and lowers your payment by $120 a month, you break even in about three months. From that point on, every lower payment is pure benefit. Because the fee is so small relative to typical monthly savings, a recast almost always pays for itself fast. The real question is rarely the fee, but whether the lump sum is best used this way at all.
Who benefits most
The clearest winners are homeowners with a sub-5% rate locked in during a low-rate window who later come into cash and want to reduce their monthly burden without surrendering that rate. Recent retirees easing into fixed income, families absorbing a new expense, and anyone who recently sold a property and rolled proceeds forward all fit the profile. If instead you're laser-focused on being mortgage-free as fast as possible, you'll likely get more from extra principal payments.
Run your numbers before deciding
The fastest way to settle the question is to see the actual figures. Enter your balance, rate, term, lump sum, and fee in the calculator below. You'll get your new payment, total interest saved, break-even point, and a plain-English verdict in seconds.