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6 Ways to Determine the Best Mortgage Loan for You
To get the best mortgage loan, know how much you can afford and shop like the bargain hunter you are.
Hal M. Bundrick is a former NerdWallet personal finance writer. He is a certified financial planner and former financial consultant and senior investment specialist for Wall Street firms. Hal advised families, business owners, nonprofits and trusts, and managed group employee retirement plans.
Phil Metzger is a former NerdWallet content management specialist focusing on mortgages, homebuying and homeownership. He has been a journalist for many years. His work has appeared in print and online in major newspapers and magazines and on television and radio. As a homeowner and investor in income property, Phil has a keen interest in housing inequality and affordability.
Jeanette Margle leads the home loans content team at NerdWallet, where she has worked since 2019. Previously, she led NerdWallet's travel rewards content team and spent three years editing for Upgraded Points while self-employed as an editor and writing coach.
Jeanette earned bachelor's degrees in journalism and Plan II Honors from the University of Texas at Austin and has a Master of Education from the University of Houston. A lifelong Texan, Jeanette grew up in a small town in the Hill Country and lives in the Houston area with her husband and daughters.
Michelle Blackford spent 30 years working in the mortgage and banking industries, starting her career as a part-time bank teller and working her way up to becoming a mortgage loan processor and underwriter. She has worked with conventional and government-backed mortgages. Michelle currently works in quality assurance for Innovation Refunds, a company that provides tax assistance to small businesses.
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If only shopping for a mortgage were as much fun as shopping for shoes — or a smartphone or a big-screen TV. Hunting down bargains and saving a few bucks is worth an afternoon or two, right? But the time and effort it takes to decode jargon and apply to lenders when shopping for a mortgage loan may not give off the same vibe.
Still, you can make this as pain-free as possible.
Here are six steps to determining which mortgage loan is right for you.
Since this is a six-figure purchase, you're probably wondering if it's within your financial reach. A calculator can help you determine how much house you can afford.
If you have a decent credit score, lenders will likely be more optimistic about how much house you can buy than you are. Keep in mind, their job is selling a loan; your job is to pay it back. So leave some room in your budget for living life.
Lenders not only want you to qualify for a loan, they want you to have money in the bank for the down payment and a long list of closing costs, too.
The down payment always seems like a big ask, but it's to your advantage to cushion your purchase with a little instant home equity by putting down as much as you comfortably can. With a too-small down payment — and with just a little downturn in the real estate market — you could have a big loan on a home that's worth less than you owe.
The phrase "30-year mortgage" suggests a long-term commitment. But there are also 10- and 15-year loans. Some lenders even offer loans in varying lengths.
If your budget allows for the bigger payment of a shorter-term loan, you're likely to see two benefits: a significant reduction in total interest expense over the life of the mortgage and a better mortgage rate.
Who are buying a house that's more expensive than standard loan guidelines allow. (See jumbo loans.)
If you don't fit any of the descriptions above, you're probably a good candidate for the conventional loans most lenders like best.
5. Know how mortgage interest rates work
The price you'll pay to borrow the money for your home, the interest rate, is another key to choosing the best mortgage loan. Mortgage rates move a lot. Without going all Wall Street on you, here's what you'll want to know: You can lock in your loan's interest rate over the long term, or let it move with the market and adjust twice a year.
A guaranteed-for-the-life-of-the-loan fixed-rate mortgage may start out a little higher than the go-with-the-market adjustable-rate mortgage, or ARM. But the lower ARM rate, which often resets twice a year after an initial term of three, five, seven or 10 years, can fluctuate up or down.
If you are certain you'll move, refinance or pay off the mortgage before the guaranteed rate on an ARM expires, the adjustable-rate mortgage may be a good option. However, if you live in the house past the introductory period and decide you want to stay in the home, interest rates available for a refinance into a fixed rate loan may be considerably higher by then.
We saved the most important way to get the best mortgage for last: Shop three or more lenders. Shop like you would for a product you like to enthusiastically bargain-hunt for.
Because what you save on a home by shopping for the lender with the best mortgage rate and the lowest origination fee could buy you a lot of shoes, smartphones and big-screen TVs.
This article has been updated to reflect the most recent fact-checking as of April 28, 2025.
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