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By nbkc bank | 06/26/2026
If you have a VA loan and are considering a refinance, you’ve probably asked one of two questions:
“Is refinancing actually worth it?”
“How long will it take for this to pay for itself?”
Both questions come down to the same concept: your break-even point.
Once you understand how to calculate it, the decision becomes much clearer—and much less based on guesswork
The VA Interest Rate Reduction Refinance Loan (IRRRL), often called a streamline refinance, is designed to improve your current loan—usually by lowering your interest rate, your monthly payment, or both.
Because it’s built for borrowers who already have a VA loan, the process is often simpler than a traditional refinance. In many cases, it requires limited documentation and may not require an appraisal.
That simplicity is part of what makes the break-even calculation so useful—it’s usually a relatively clean comparison between your current loan and your new one.
Your break-even point is the amount of time it takes for your monthly savings to cover the cost of refinancing.
Here’s the formula in its simplest form:
Break-even (in months) = Total refinance costs ÷ Monthly savings
Once you’ve saved more than you spent to refinance, you’re ahead financially.
Let’s walk through a straightforward scenario:
Total refinance costs: $2,400
Monthly savings: $150
Break-even calculation:
$2,400 ÷ $150 = 16 months
In this case, you would recover your costs in about a year and four months. Every month after that represents real savings.
This is the key number to understand before deciding whether to move forward.
To calculate your break-even point accurately, you need to include all relevant costs
For a VA IRRRL, this can include:
Closing costs (lender fees, title, etc.)
The VA funding fee (if applicable)
Any costs rolled into the new loan
Some of these can be financed into the loan instead of paid upfront—but they still count in your calculation because they affect your total loan balance.
One detail that often gets overlooked is lender fees. Some lenders include origination charges that increase your total cost.
At nbkc bank, we do not charge an origination fee on VA loans, which can reduce the amount you’re working to recover and shorten your break-even timeline. Even small differences in fees can have a noticeable impact on how quickly a refinance pays off.
Monthly savings usually come from a lower interest rate, which reduces your payment.
However, it’s worth confirming exactly how much your payment changes—not just relying on a general estimate. The number you want is the true difference between your current payment and your new one.
Also keep in mind:
If you reset your loan term (for example, starting a new 30-year loan), your payment may drop—but total interest over time could increase
If your goal is long-term savings rather than just monthly relief, that should factor into your decision
An IRRRL tends to make sense when:
Your monthly savings are meaningful
Your break-even point is relatively short
You plan to stay in the home long enough to benefit
For example, if you break even in 12–18 months and expect to stay in your home for several years, the math is usually in your favor.
Refinancing may not make sense when:
Your monthly savings are minimal
Your break-even timeline is long
You’re likely to move or refinance again before reaching that point
In those cases, even a lower rate doesn’t necessarily translate into real financial benefit.
Because VA IRRRLs are designed to be easier and often involve fewer hurdles, it can be tempting to move forward based on the idea that it’s a “good deal.”
But the real question isn’t whether the program is good—it’s whether the numbers work for you.
The break-even calculation cuts through everything else and gives you a clear, objective answer.
The easiest way to answer the “is it worth it?” question is to look at your specific situation—your current loan, your rate, and what options are available.
At nbkc bank, our team helps VA borrowers walk through these scenarios every day, breaking down costs, savings, and timing so you can see exactly how a refinance plays out.