Buydown Options
The most common buydown is the 2-1 buydown. In the past, for a buyer
to secure a 2-1 buydown they would pay 3 points above current market
points in order to pay a below market interest rate during the first two
years of the loan. At the end of the two years they would then pay the
old market rate for the remaining term.
As an example, if the current market rate for a conforming fixed rate
loan is 8.5% at a cost of 1.5 points, the buydown gives the borrower a
first year rate of 6.50%, a second year rate of 7.50% and a third
through 30th year rate of 8.50% and the cost would be 4.5 points.
Buydown were usually paid for by a transferring company because of the
high points associated with them.
In today's market, mortgage companies have designed variations of the
old buydowns rather than charge higher points to the buyer in the
beginning they increase the note rate to cover their yields in the later
years.
As an example, if the current rate for a conforming fixed rate loan
is 8.50% at a cost of 1.5 points, the buydown would give the buyer a
first year rate of 7.25%, a second year rate of 8.25% and a third
through 30th year rate of 9.25% , or a three-quarter point higher note
rate than the current market and the cost would remain at 1.5 points.
Another common buydown is the 3-2-1 buydown which works much in the
same ways as the 2-1 buydown, with the exception of the starting
interest rate being 3% below the note rate. Another variation is the
flex-fixed buydown programs that increase at six month interval rather
than annual intervals.
As an example, for a flex-fixed jumbo buydown at a cost of 1.5
points, the first six months rate would be 7.50%, the second six months
the rate would be 8.00%, the next six months rate would be 8.50%, the
next six months rate would be 9.00%, the next six months the rate would
be 9.50% and at the 37th month the rate would reach the note rate of
9.875% and would remain there for the remainder of the term. A
comparable jumbo 30 year fixed at 1.5 points would be 8.875%.
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