Mortgage Refinance On Line: Stupid? Secure?

Interest rates are low.
Currently I’m paying 7.85% on a 30 year mortgage.
I know there are mortgage brokers out there who will offer a better deal.
I see ads where you can do it on-line, but to be honest, I am not all that sure I want to put all the personal info out there.

Am I being paranoid?
Has anyone done this with success?
Should I just go to a couple of local banks and do it in person?

Statistics and/or real life experience would be helpful.

  • Yes - And you think your personal info is not out there already? If you have a problem with yielding up personal financial data for someone to make a loan decision on you willl have to get over it or pay for the privilege.

In personal or over the phone it makes no difference if you have good credit. If you were hard to finance a personal visit to explain the context of your credit might be useful, but if your credit is golden they could really care less about “seeing” you they just want your business. See a few mortgage websites for guidance. Many times you can complete the app and most of the process by mail. (I did for a Wells Fargo refinance)

here are three well known companies

www.wellsfargo.com
http://www.ditech.com/home/

Here is a Here is a mortgage calcualtor

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Dopers with mortgages - How to possibly save a few hundred bucks or so

I am in the process of refinancing with Bank of America and initiated the whole process online. You shouldn’t be too concerned with providing information to a reputable bank online, although you should always be concerned with providing information to a company you don’t know, online or otherwise. I would stay away from any finance company that advertises with spam. If you pick a reputable bank and they happen to do business online, you should have a fair amount of confidence in providing personal information.

I have refinanced twice with online-only brokers. It’ s been fantastic. Turnaround was half the time of the brick’n’mortar guys who handled my original mortgage loan (and I’ve knocked 2% off my original rate).

We refinanced online from leads we got at lendingtree.com. The process went fine. It felt a little weird refinancing with a bank that is from another state, but they simply faxed all their stuff to a mail boxes etc. near me and paid one of their employees (they are all notaries) to come to our house and get our signatures in the 20,000 places we had to sign.

You only had 20,000 places to sign? It sounds like they have been streamlining the process.

Some relatives of ours just refinanced at eloan and were happy with it. I just noticed that they have a phone number to call if you are worried about doing this on the web. There are also mortgage brokers not on the web that will handle things by phone.

I tried Priceline. Looks as though a local mortgage broker has a better deal.

FWIW, I’ve read some complaints about Lending Tree. Nothing fraudulent, just that the process took a long time and more information had to be typed in than what was required at local mortgage places, and that the offers that came in weren’t as good as they got at the local bank.

Best bet is to get a rate/terms from a local mortgage broker or bank along with the online places.

If you really love getting phone calls from persistent salesmen, go for an online quote. I got some quotes on line but the rate difference was not enough to have me bypass our local lenders. I’m refinancing again from 7.5% to 6.0%, perhaps you can beat that online but I know the lender will not sell the mortgage and they let me do my own escrow and I don’t need PMI. I vote for local lenders.

I used Home Finance of America and it went fine.

Just remember to be careful with all of this. There are (unfortunately) many scams about that masquarade as legitimate lending sites only to take your personal info and run. I get emails about once a month that I know are shady.