What Is Refinancing?
Refinancing means replacing your existing mortgage with a new one — usually from a different bank and at better terms. It's one of the most powerful tools in a property investor's toolkit because it lets you access equity, lower your interest rate, or restructure your debt.
Three Reasons to Refinance
1. Lower Interest Rate
You took a loan at 4.8% three years ago. Today, a competing bank offers 3.95%. On a RM 400,000 loan with 27 years remaining:
- Old payment: RM 2,150/month
- New payment: RM 1,960/month
- Monthly savings: RM 190
- Annual savings: RM 2,280
- Savings over remaining tenure: RM 61,560
2. Cash-Out Refinance
Your property has appreciated. You can refinance for a higher amount and pocket the difference:
- Current property value: RM 600,000
- Outstanding loan: RM 350,000
- New loan (80% LTV): RM 480,000
- Cash out: RM 480,000 - RM 350,000 = RM 130,000
That RM 130,000 can be used as a down payment for your next property — a strategy called "recycling equity."
3. Debt Restructuring
Extend your tenure to lower monthly payments (useful if cash flow is tight), or shorten it to pay off faster and save on total interest.
The Costs of Refinancing
Refinancing isn't free. You'll need to account for these costs:
| Cost Item | Estimated Amount (RM) |
|---|---|
| Legal fees (new loan) | RM 3,000 - 6,000 |
| Valuation fee | RM 500 - 1,500 |
| Stamp duty on new loan | 0.5% of loan amount |
| Early settlement penalty (if within lock-in) | 2-3% of outstanding balance |
| Mortgage insurance (MRTA/MLTA) | Varies |
For a RM 480,000 refinance, typical costs are RM 8,000-15,000. This means your savings must exceed these costs for refinancing to make sense.
The Break-Even Calculation
Break-even months = Refinancing costs / Monthly savings
If refinancing costs RM 10,000 and saves RM 190/month: 10,000 / 190 = 53 months (about 4.4 years)
If you plan to keep the property longer than 4.4 years, refinancing makes financial sense.
In the US, refinancing costs typically run 2-5% of the loan amount ($6,000-$15,000 on a $300,000 loan). The break-even calculation is the same — compare costs against monthly savings to determine if it's worthwhile.
