Entry fees
Application, valuation, and settlement costs matter most when you expect to refinance again or the savings case is small.
Know which fees change the real cost of a loan so you can compare products beyond headline rate marketing.
Loan fees matter when they change the real total cost or strip out flexibility you intended to use. The same fee can be trivial on one loan and decisive on another — whether it is a mortgage, car loan, or personal loan.
Application, valuation, and settlement costs matter most when you expect to refinance again or the savings case is small.
Package and annual fees should be judged against the benefits you actually use, especially offset and feature access.
Discharge, break, and switching costs matter when flexibility is part of your plan, not just when you are already leaving.
Application, valuation, package, annual, discharge, settlement, and break or switching costs can all matter depending on the loan type and how long you keep it.
No. A lower rate can still be a weaker deal if the fee load erodes the real benefit or reduces flexibility you actually need.
They matter most when the savings case is marginal, the loan balance is smaller, or you expect to refinance or restructure again relatively soon.