Mortgages
The biggest decision on paper.
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A mortgage is likely the largest financial commitment most people will ever make, and yet the process of choosing one is often rushed — squeezed into the same few weeks as inspections, appraisals, and moving logistics. That's unfortunate, because even a small difference in rate or fees on a 30-year loan compounds into a genuinely large amount of money over time.
Federal regulation requires every mortgage lender to provide a standardized Loan Estimate document, which is the single most useful tool for comparing lenders honestly — it breaks out the rate, fees, points, and total closing costs in the same format across every lender, so you're not comparing a verbal quote from one lender against fine print from another.
This section also covers the fixed-versus-adjustable decision, which trips up a lot of first-time buyers. An adjustable-rate mortgage isn't inherently risky or wrong — it depends heavily on how long you actually plan to stay in the home, a question worth answering honestly before comparing rates at all.
First-time buyers in particular tend to underestimate closing costs, which typically run 2–5% of the loan amount and cover things like the appraisal, title insurance, and lender fees. These costs are negotiable more often than people realize — some can be shopped separately from the mortgage itself, and some lenders offer credits toward them in exchange for a slightly higher rate. We cover these tradeoffs in detail rather than treating closing costs as a fixed, unavoidable number.
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What to know before you compare
- Request a Loan Estimate from every lender you're seriously considering — it's standardized by law, making true comparison possible.
- Multiple mortgage inquiries within a short shopping window are typically treated as a single inquiry for credit scoring purposes.
- Discount points lower your rate for an upfront cost — the payoff depends on how long you'll hold the mortgage.
- An ARM's lower initial rate only pays off if you sell or refinance before the fixed period ends — know your timeline first.
- Ask each lender for the exact same rate-lock period so you're comparing quotes that expire on the same schedule.
Below, we break down lender comparison, the fixed-vs-adjustable decision, and the costs that tend to surprise first-time buyers at closing.
Frequently asked
How much should I put down on a home?
20% avoids private mortgage insurance (PMI), but many loan programs allow far less down. The right amount depends on your savings cushion after the purchase — draining every reserve for a bigger down payment can leave you exposed to unexpected costs.
Should I choose the lender with the lowest rate?
Not automatically — compare the full Loan Estimate, since a low rate can come with higher fees or points that offset the savings. The APR figure (rate plus fees, annualized) is a better single number for comparison than the rate alone.
2 guides in Mortgages
How to Compare Mortgage Lenders Properly
The lowest advertised rate rarely tells the full story once fees and points are factored in.
Fixed vs. Adjustable-Rate Mortgages, Explained Simply
The right choice depends almost entirely on how long you plan to stay in the home.