Loan-to-value ratio used to evaluate a refinance against the home's value.
Refinance loan-to-value is the loan-to-value ratio used to evaluate a refinance against the home’s value.
Refinance loan-to-value matters because the borrower is not buying the home again, but the new lender still needs to know how much debt will sit against the property. A refinance with more equity usually has a different risk profile than one that pushes the loan amount close to the home’s value.
The concept affects refinance approval, pricing, mortgage insurance, cash-out limits, and whether the transaction fits the intended loan program.
Borrowers encounter refinance LTV during application, appraisal review, underwriting, and final loan-amount decisions. It becomes especially important when the borrower wants cash out, wants to roll costs into the new loan, or discovers that the appraised value differs from the expected value.
The lender typically compares the new refinance loan amount with the property value used for the refinance review.
| Number | What it tells the borrower |
|---|---|
| Refinance Loan Amount | Size of the new mortgage |
| Refinance LTV | How the new loan compares with the refinance value |
| Combined Loan-to-Value Ratio (CLTV) | How all mortgage liens compare with value |
| Refinance Appraisal | Property value support used in many refinance files |
A homeowner wants to refinance a $300,000 loan on a home valued at $400,000. The refinance LTV is based on the new loan amount compared with the value used by the lender, not on the original purchase price from years ago.
Refinance loan-to-value differs from Loan-to-Value Ratio (LTV) because LTV is the broader ratio concept. Refinance LTV is the same idea applied specifically to a refinance file.
It differs from Refinance Loan Amount because loan amount is the debt size, while refinance LTV compares that amount with value.
It also differs from Cash-Out Refinance. Cash-out refinance is a transaction type; refinance LTV is one measure used to evaluate it.