Refinancing in 2025: Is It Worth Switching Lenders?

Updated 5 October 2025 · 5 min read

With cash rate expectations shifting, many borrowers are asking whether a refinance in 2025 makes sense. The simple test: does your monthly saving beat the switching costs in a reasonable time? Use the tool below to see your monthly saving and break-even instantly.

Quick refinance calculator

Enter your loan, remaining term, current rate, the new rate you’re offered, and any switching costs. Results update automatically.









Item Stay with current lender Refinance
Monthly repayment $– $–
Monthly saving $–
Break-even time
Total saving (2 years) $–
Total saving (5 years) $–

Two quick scenarios

These examples show how the numbers play out. Change the inputs above to match your situation.

Scenario A: Stay with your bank

  • Loan: $500,000 · Years left: 25
  • Current rate: 6.60% p.a.
  • You keep paying your existing repayment (see table). No switching costs.

Scenario B: Refinance to a lower rate

  • Loan: $500,000 · Years left: 25
  • New rate: 6.10% p.a. (0.50% lower)
  • Switching costs: $1,200 (discharge, application, valuation)
  • Result: monthly repayment drops (see table). Break-even occurs when cumulative savings exceed $1,200.

Want to test more combinations? Use our full Repayment Estimator or see how rate moves change repayments in our RBA Rate Decisions guide.

When refinancing tends to work

  • You’re on a “loyalty tax”: your rate crept up relative to new-customer rates.
  • You have a solid repayment history and a loan-to-value ratio (LVR) at or below 80% (avoids LMI).
  • The monthly saving covers switching costs within ~12–24 months.

When to think twice

  • Fixed-rate break fees are high (check your terms if currently fixed).
  • Your LVR is above 80% and switching triggers lenders mortgage insurance.
  • You plan to sell or restructure the loan soon (not enough time to reach break-even).

General information only — not financial advice. Consider seeking independent advice for your circumstances.