Home United States USA — Financial They bought homes with the intention to refinance. Now they’re stuck

They bought homes with the intention to refinance. Now they’re stuck

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Expert predictions of falling rates have been proved wrong time and time again.
Steven and Katherine Wolf missed out on the ultra-low mortgage rates of the pandemic. By the time the couple secured solid jobs and could buy a home, borrowing costs more than doubled.
Rather than wait, the former renters jumped into homeownership in fall 2022. They also stretched, buying a Bakersfield, California, home that carried an uncomfortable monthly payment.
Steven Wolf figured the pain would be fleeting. Within a year rates would drop enough to allow them to refinance and put hundreds of dollars back into their pockets.
That hasn’t happened and isn’t expected to soon. In fact, rates are higher.
“We did this with the expectation that we would only have to weather this high payment for a chunk of time,” the 37-year old English teacher said. “Now that chunk of time is looking like it might actually be permanent.”
Across the country, many buyers employed similar strategies after rates surged in 2022 — at times encouraged by real estate agents and mortgage brokers who earn a commission on each deal. The tactic could still work, but as interest rates stay higher for longer, some Americans express varying degrees of regret as their finances buckle.
A woman in Twinsburg, Ohio, said she’s taken a second job. A man in Oregon said putting money away for retirement is a “distant thought.”
Some said they’re now selling their home or will need to soon. Chelsea Bolinger purchased a house in Highland Ranch, Colo. The 35-year-old tech worker called the experience “horrible.”
“I only bought it because the loan company really pushed that interest rates were going to go down,” Bolinger said.
In Wolf’s case, he said his family’s monthly housing costs jumped nearly $1,500 when they ditched their second-floor apartment and bought a Bakersfield house for $421,000, in part because he and his wife wanted a yard for their two children.
Unable to knock down his monthly payment through refinancing, the family is making little progress paying off other debts and Wolf is working an extra period.
His wife, a speech language pathologist, has picked up weekend shifts she wouldn’t have if rates had dropped.
“That would have been more Saturdays together with the kids,” Wolf said.
In theory, the strategy Wolf and others employed is supposed to work like this.

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