Two Tools That Look Similar but Are Built for Completely Different Situations
If you are trying to lower your mortgage payment or improve your loan terms, both a refinance and a loan modification can technically get you there. The monthly payment on either option could end up lower than what you are paying today. But these two tools are not interchangeable, and choosing the wrong one for your situation can either cost you thousands in unnecessary fees or leave you without the protection you actually need.
The fundamental difference comes down to this: a refinance is a financial tool you choose when you are in a position of strength. A loan modification is a loss mitigation tool designed for borrowers facing hardship. One replaces your loan with a new one on better terms. The other changes your existing loan to prevent you from losing your home.
This guide explains exactly how each option works, who qualifies for each, what the credit and cost implications are, and how to decide which path is right for your specific circumstances.
| At a Glance: The Core DistinctionRefinance: You replace your current mortgage with a new loan, typically to secure a lower rate, change your term, or access equity. Requires good credit and current payment status.Loan Modification: Your existing servicer permanently changes the terms of your current mortgage. Designed for borrowers in financial hardship who cannot qualify for a refinance.Key rule of thumb: “If you are able to refinance, that is typically the option that will be offered.” If your finances have taken a hit and refinancing is off the table, a modification provides a lifeline a refinance simply cannot.Source: AmeriSave: What Is a Loan Modification? 2026 |
Side-by-Side Comparison: Refinance vs. Loan Modification
| Factor | Mortgage Refinance | Loan Modification |
|---|---|---|
| What it does | Replaces existing loan with a new one | Changes terms of existing loan |
| Who qualifies | Current borrowers with stable income | Borrowers in or approaching hardship |
| Credit requirement | Typically 620+ (best rates at 740+) | No minimum; hardship documentation required |
| Payment history | Must be current on payments | May qualify while behind on payments |
| Closing costs | 2% to 5% of loan balance | None or minimal lender fee |
| Interest rate | Market rate (currently avg. 6.76% 30-yr) | Negotiated; may be below market |
| Lender | Any qualified lender | Must work with existing servicer |
| Credit impact | Minor temporary dip from hard inquiry | Can lower score less than foreclosure |
| Equity required | Usually yes (80% LTV standard) | Not required |
| Process time | 30 to 60 days average | 30 to 90 days; includes trial period |
| Long-term cost | Lower if rate improves significantly | May increase total cost via term extension |
| Primary purpose | Save money, change terms, access equity | Avoid foreclosure; stay in the home. |
What Is a Mortgage Refinance?
When you refinance, you apply for an entirely new mortgage loan, often with a different lender, that pays off your existing loan. The new loan comes with its own interest rate, term, and monthly payment. You go through a fresh underwriting process, pay closing costs, and start a new loan from scratch.
As of May 2026, the national average 30-year fixed refinance rate is 6.76% and the 15-year refinance rate averages 6.09%, according to Bankrate. The right refinance can lower your monthly payment, shorten your loan term, eliminate private mortgage insurance, or convert an adjustable-rate mortgage to a fixed rate.
Who Qualifies for a Refinance
Refinancing requires you to qualify as if you were a new borrower. Lenders will review your credit score, income stability, debt-to-income ratio, and the current equity in your home. Most conventional lenders require a minimum credit score of 620, though borrowers with scores of 740 or higher receive the best available rates. You must also be current on your mortgage payments. A lender will not approve a refinance for a borrower who is behind on their existing loan.
- Credit score: 620 minimum for conventional loans; 580 for FHA
- Payment history: Must be current; no recent late payments
- Debt-to-income ratio: Generally 43% or lower
- Home equity: Typically 20% equity (80% LTV) for best rates; some programs allow up to 97% LTV
- Stable income: Two years of documented employment or self-employment income
The Costs of Refinancing
Refinancing is not free. Closing costs typically run 2% to 5% of your loan balance. On a $280,000 loan, that means $5,600 to $14,000 paid at closing or rolled into the new loan balance. Those costs need to be recovered through lower monthly payments or interest savings before the refinance produces any net benefit. That recovery timeline is called the break-even point, and it matters significantly if there is any chance you will sell or refinance again before reaching it.
For a full breakdown of what refinancing typically costs, see Home Refinance Costs Explained: What You Will Actually Pay on FinanceDevil.
What Is a Loan Modification?
A loan modification is a permanent, written change to the original terms of your existing mortgage, negotiated directly with your current mortgage servicer. Unlike a refinance, it does not create a new loan. It restructures the one you already have.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau classifies loan modifications as a type of loss mitigation, alongside forbearance agreements, repayment plans, and short sales. What makes a modification distinct is that it is the only loss mitigation option that both keeps you in your home and permanently resets your payment terms at a lower, more sustainable level.
Common modification types include reducing the interest rate, extending the loan term (adding years to push payments lower), switching from an adjustable to a fixed rate, or in some cases, deferring or reducing a portion of the principal balance. Most modifications combine two or more of these changes.
Who Qualifies for a Loan Modification
Loan modifications exist specifically for borrowers who cannot qualify for a refinance due to financial hardship. To be considered, you generally need to demonstrate a qualifying hardship, which can include job loss, significant income reduction, divorce, illness or disability, military deployment, or a natural disaster.
- Hardship documentation: A written hardship letter plus supporting evidence
- Payment status: May qualify even if already behind on payments
- Credit score: No minimum credit score required
- Equity: Not required; modifications are available even for underwater homeowners
- Income: Must demonstrate enough steady income to handle the modified payment
The Trial Period
Most loan modifications include a three-month trial period before becoming permanent. During the trial, you make payments at the proposed new amount. If you make all three trial payments on time, the modification is finalized. If you miss payments during the trial period, you may be disqualified, and your servicer may begin discussing other exit options, including foreclosure proceedings. The trial period is both a test and a protection, since it confirms the new payment is actually affordable before the terms are locked in.
How to Contact Your Servicer and Apply for a Modification
The modification process begins with your mortgage servicer, not a bank or outside lender. Your servicer is the company that collects your monthly payments and manages your account, which may be different from the original lender who issued the loan. The contact number appears on your monthly mortgage statement.
Ask specifically to speak with the loss mitigation department. This is the team within your servicer that handles hardship programs, forbearance, modifications, and other payment relief options.
What You Will Need to Submit
| Refinance Documents | Loan Modification Documents |
|---|---|
| Last 2 years of federal tax returns | Hardship letter explaining financial difficulty |
| Recent pay stubs (last 30 days) | Last 2 years of federal tax returns |
| Last 2-3 months of bank statements | Recent pay stubs or proof of income |
| Current mortgage statement | Last 2-3 months of bank statements |
| Photo ID and Social Security number | Monthly expense breakdown |
| Homeowners insurance declarations page | Proof of hardship (medical bills, layoff notice) |
| Property tax records | Current mortgage statement and loan number |
Many servicers also require a completed financial hardship application form, which they will provide. The CFPB warns that scammers specifically target homeowners seeking loan modifications by posing as third-party experts who charge upfront fees. No legitimate service provider charges money before delivering a modification. Your servicer will work with you directly at no cost.
For official guidance on your rights during the modification process, visit the CFPB at consumerfinance.gov.
How Each Option Affects Your Credit Score
Refinancing and Your Credit
A refinance triggers a hard inquiry on your credit report when the lender pulls your credit during the application process. A single hard inquiry typically reduces your credit score by 5 to 10 points temporarily. If you shop multiple lenders within a short window, typically 14 to 45 days depending on the scoring model, those inquiries are often treated as a single event. Your score generally recovers within a few months of the refinance closing.
Loan Modification and Your Credit
The credit impact of a loan modification depends largely on your payment history before the modification is approved. If your account was already delinquent, those missed payments will have already lowered your score significantly. The modification itself is typically reported to credit bureaus as a change to loan terms, which can cause an additional temporary dip.
However, the credit consequences of a loan modification are substantially less severe than the alternative: foreclosure. A foreclosure can drop a credit score by 100 points or more and remains on your credit report for seven years. Rocket Mortgage notes that in the case of natural disaster hardships, some servicers specifically do not report negative credit information during the modification process.
| Credit Score Impact ComparisonRefinance: 5 to 10 point temporary dip from hard inquiry. Recovers within a few months. No lasting negative impact if you remain current.Loan Modification: Impact varies by prior payment status. Modification itself may cause a temporary dip, but far less damaging than foreclosure’s 100+ point drop that stays on record for 7 years.Forbearance (as a first step): FICO research shows mortgage forbearance typically results in only a 3 to 8 point decrease if the agreement is followed correctly.Source: Rocket Mortgage: Loan Modification Guide | AmeriSave Mortgage Forbearance Guide 2026 |
Can You Refinance After a Loan Modification?
Yes, but there are waiting periods that apply before most lenders will approve a refinance following a modification. The waiting period begins from the date your modified loan terms became final, and you must demonstrate a consistent history of on-time payments throughout that period.
| Loan Type | Min. Wait After Modification | Key Requirement | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| FHA | 12 months | On-time payment history | Lender overlays may extend to 24 months |
| VA | 12 months | Timely payments since mod | VA focuses on current repayment ability |
| Conventional | 12-24 months | Satisfactory payment history | Fannie/Freddie may vary by case |
| USDA | 12-36 months | Lender discretion applies | Wider range based on circumstances |
Note that individual lenders may impose stricter requirements, sometimes called lender overlays, that extend these waiting periods beyond the minimum guidelines. Working with a lender that does not add overlays on top of standard agency guidelines can significantly improve your options after a modification.
Once the waiting period is complete and you have rebuilt your payment history, a refinance may allow you to access current market rates that are substantially better than the modified terms you received during hardship.
When to Consider Forbearance Before a Modification
If your hardship is temporary, such as a short-term job loss, a medical event with a defined recovery period, or an unexpected one-time expense, forbearance may be the more appropriate first step before pursuing a permanent modification.
Forbearance temporarily pauses or reduces your mortgage payments for an agreed period without permanently changing your loan terms. For federally backed loans (FHA, VA, USDA, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac), forbearance programs are typically accessible with relatively straightforward documentation. The credit impact of forbearance, when the agreement is followed correctly, tends to be minimal.
When forbearance ends, you and your servicer will discuss exit options. Those options include a lump sum repayment of missed payments, a repayment plan spread over several months, a deferral that moves missed payments to the end of the loan, or a permanent loan modification for borrowers who cannot return to their original payment terms.
The key principle: contact your servicer before missing a payment whenever possible. Proactive communication gives you more options and protects your credit more effectively than waiting until you are already behind.
Decision Framework: Which Option Is Right for Your Situation?
| Your Situation | Best Option | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Current on payments, want lower rate | Refinance | You qualify; market rates available |
| Behind 1-3 months, facing hardship | Loan Modification | Refinance not available; mod prevents default |
| Behind on payments, want to stay in home | Loan Modification | Loss mitigation path; avoids foreclosure |
| Current, good credit, want equity access | Refinance | Cash-out or rate-term refi options available |
| Significantly underwater on mortgage | Loan Modification | Mod can address principal; refi typically cannot |
| Temporary hardship, will recover soon | Forbearance first | Pause payments before committing to modification |
| Had mod, now stable, want better rate | Refinance | After 12-24 months of timely payments post-mod |
| CFPB Warning: Loan Modification ScamsThe Consumer Financial Protection Bureau warns that scammers specifically target homeowners in financial distress by posing as loan modification specialists who promise to save your home for an upfront fee.Hard rules: No legitimate company charges fees before delivering a modification. Your mortgage servicer provides modification assistance directly at no cost.Red flags: Upfront fees, requests to stop paying your servicer, promises to guarantee specific results, pressure to sign over your deed.Report suspected scams to the CFPB at consumerfinance.gov/complaint. |
CFPB Resources for Hardship Borrowers
If you are struggling to make mortgage payments, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau offers free tools and resources to help you understand your options and connect with a HUD-approved housing counselor:
- CFPB: Mortgage Help for Homeowners
- Find a HUD-Approved Housing Counselor
- CFPB: What Is a Mortgage Loan Modification?
HUD-approved housing counselors provide free guidance on foreclosure prevention, loan modifications, and refinance options. Using one does not commit you to any particular course of action.
For homeowners evaluating whether now is the right time to refinance more broadly, see Home Refinance in 2026: Is Now the Right Time? on FinanceDevil. If you have fallen behind on payments and want to understand what comes next, see 7 Signs You Should Refinance Your Mortgage Right Now.
| Expert Perspective“A loan modification is a loss mitigation tool that can help you avoid foreclosure by changing your existing loan, while a refinance is a financial tool used to get better rates or different terms by replacing your existing loan with a new one. If you are able to refinance, that is typically the option that will be offered.”Pahm Foxley, Vice President of Mortgage Lending, Wasatch Peaks Credit Union, via Benzinga |
The Bottom Line: These Tools Serve Different Borrowers
A mortgage refinance and a loan modification both reduce your monthly mortgage payment. Beyond that surface similarity, they are fundamentally different instruments designed for fundamentally different financial situations.
If you are current on your mortgage, have stable income, and a qualifying credit score, a refinance almost always delivers better long-term financial outcomes. You gain access to current market rates, can shop among competing lenders, and replace your existing loan with new terms that reflect your financial strength.
If you are behind on payments, facing documented hardship, or at serious risk of default, a loan modification is the appropriate tool. It does not require good credit or a new appraisal. It works with your current servicer through a structured process to permanently restructure what you already owe, with the specific goal of keeping you in your home.
When in doubt, contact your servicer and a HUD-approved housing counselor. They can assess your specific situation and tell you which path you actually qualify for, which is often the clearest answer to the question of which one is better.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is the main difference between a refinance and a loan modification?
A refinance replaces your existing mortgage with an entirely new loan, typically at a better rate or on different terms. A loan modification permanently changes the terms of your existing mortgage without creating a new loan. Refinancing is for financially stable borrowers seeking better terms, while loan modification is a hardship tool designed to prevent foreclosure for borrowers who cannot qualify for a refinance.
2. Can I get a loan modification if I am behind on my mortgage payments?
Yes. Unlike a refinance, a loan modification does not require you to be current on your payments. Borrowers who are already behind can still qualify if they can demonstrate a qualifying financial hardship and show enough steady income to handle the modified payment. Your servicer may require documentation of the hardship and financial statements as part of the application.
3. Does a loan modification hurt your credit score?
A loan modification can cause a temporary dip in your credit score, depending on your payment history before the modification was approved. However, the credit impact of a modification is substantially less severe than a foreclosure, which can reduce your score by 100 or more points and remain on your credit report for seven years. Consistently making on-time payments after the modification is completed helps rebuild your score over time.
4. How long does a loan modification take?
The loan modification process typically takes 30 to 90 days from initial application to final approval. Most modifications include a three-month trial period before the new terms are made permanent. You must make all trial period payments on time to receive final approval. The refinance process averages 30 to 60 days for most conventional loans.
5. Can I refinance after a loan modification?
Yes, but most lenders require a waiting period of 12 to 24 months after a loan modification before approving a refinance. FHA and VA loans typically require 12 months of on-time payments since the modification became final. Conventional loans typically require 12 to 24 months. USDA loans may require up to 36 months. Individual lenders may impose stricter requirements beyond these minimums.
6. Do loan modifications have closing costs?
No. A loan modification does not involve closing costs because you are not taking out a new loan. Your servicer may charge a one-time modification fee in some cases, but there are no appraisal fees, origination fees, or title costs. This is one of the practical advantages of a modification for borrowers who cannot afford the 2% to 5% closing costs that a refinance requires.
7. What qualifies as a hardship for a loan modification?
Servicers typically recognize the following as qualifying hardships: job loss or significant income reduction, divorce or separation, death of a co-borrower, illness or disability affecting your ability to work, military deployment, significant increase in expenses such as medical bills, or property damage from a natural disaster. You must document the hardship in a written letter and provide supporting financial records.
8. Should I use a third-party company to help me get a loan modification?
No. The CFPB warns that scammers specifically target homeowners seeking modifications by charging upfront fees and promising results they cannot guarantee. Your mortgage servicer will work with you directly through the loss mitigation department at no cost. For free, professional guidance from a neutral third party, contact a HUD-approved housing counselor at hud.gov.
Sources and Further Reading
- Bankrate: What Is a Mortgage Loan Modification? 2026
- AmeriSave: What Is a Loan Modification? Your Guide for 2026
- Rocket Mortgage: Loan Modification Explained
- Lower.com: Loan Modification vs. Refinance
- Quicken Loans: Loan Modification vs. Refinance
- SoFi: Loan Modification vs. Refinancing
- Nolo: Loan Modification Process Requirements 2026
- Benzinga: Loan Modification vs. Refinance: Which Route to Go?
- CFPB: Mortgage Help for Homeowners
- HUD: Find a Housing Counselor
- FinanceDevil: Home Refinance in 2026 – Is Now the Right Time?
