Learn how to refinance your mortgage in New Zealand â when to switch, how to calculate break fees, what cashback to expect, and how to get the best deal. Updated NZ guide.
Learn how to refinance your mortgage in New Zealand â when to switch, how to calculate break fees, what cashback to expect, and how to get the best deal. Updated NZ guide.
If your fixed-rate term is about to roll over — or you suspect your bank is no longer giving you its sharpest rate — a refinance could save you tens of thousands of dollars over the life of your loan. Refinancing a home loan in New Zealand means replacing your existing mortgage with a new one, either at a different bank or on better terms with your current lender. Done at the right time and for the right reasons, it is one of the most powerful levers a homeowner has. Done carelessly, it can cost more than it saves. This guide walks you through every step, from understanding the true costs to knowing exactly when to make the move.

At its core, refinancing means paying out your existing home loan and replacing it with a new one — usually with a different lender, though sometimes with the same bank under restructured terms. The new loan pays off the old one, and you begin repaying the new lender under the agreed conditions.
In New Zealand, the most common reasons homeowners refinance are:
It is worth noting that New Zealand’s lending environment differs meaningfully from overseas markets. Unlike US lender guidelines and American consumer credit practices, NZ banks assess borrowers under the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act (CCCFA), which requires lenders to make responsible lending decisions based on your actual income, expenses, and financial commitments. This shapes both what you can borrow and how lenders assess your refinance application.

Refinancing a mortgage in New Zealand is more involved than simply signing up for a new credit card, but it is far less daunting than buying a home for the first time. Here is the typical process from start to settlement.
Before approaching any lender, gather the details of your existing mortgage: the outstanding balance, your current interest rate, the fixed-rate expiry date, and whether you received a cashback incentive when you originally signed up. This information determines your break fee exposure and clawback liability — two of the biggest costs in any refinance.
Run the numbers before you do anything else. The key question is: will the savings from a lower rate (or the value of a cashback payment) outweigh the costs of switching? Use a home loan calculator to model different rate and term scenarios side by side. The Sorted mortgage calculator is also a free, independent tool that lets you compare repayment amounts across different rates and loan terms without any commercial bias.
Your break-even point is the number of months it takes for your interest savings to exceed your upfront switching costs. If you plan to sell the property or refix again before that point, refinancing may not be worth it.
Contact at least two or three lenders directly, or engage a registered mortgage adviser who can access multiple lenders on your behalf. Advisers are paid by the lender, not you, and are required by the Financial Markets Authority to act in your best interest. Check that any adviser holds a licence on the FMA’s financial service provider register.
When comparing offers, look beyond the headline interest rate. Ask each lender for:
A refinance application is essentially a new home loan application. The new lender will assess your income, living expenses, existing debts, and the value of your property. You will typically need to provide recent payslips or tax returns, bank statements (usually three months), a list of assets and liabilities, and your current mortgage statement.
If you are self-employed, expect to provide two years of financial statements and IR3 tax returns. The CCCFA requires lenders to verify your actual expenditure, so be prepared for detailed scrutiny of your bank statements.
Most lenders will order an automated electronic valuation (AVM) at no cost to you. If your loan-to-value ratio (LVR) is borderline, or the property is unusual, the bank may require a registered valuation, which typically costs between $700 and $1,200 and is usually your expense. Properties with high equity (LVR below 80%) generally sail through this step without issue.
You will need a solicitor to discharge the existing mortgage from the property title and register the new one. Some lenders cover or subsidise these legal fees as part of their refinance package — always ask. If you are paying your own legal costs, budget between $900 and $1,800 depending on complexity. Settlement typically takes two to four weeks from conditional approval.

The enthusiasm for a lower rate or a cashback cheque can make it easy to overlook the costs of switching. Here is a clear breakdown of every potential cost you need to factor in.
If you are on a fixed-rate mortgage and you break it before the term expires, your bank will charge a break fee. This is calculated based on the difference between your contracted rate and current wholesale rates for the remaining term, multiplied by your outstanding balance. In a falling-rate environment, break fees can be negligible or even zero. In a rising-rate environment, they can run into thousands of dollars. Always ask your bank for a written break fee estimate before proceeding — they are required to provide one.
If your current bank paid you a cashback when you first signed up, there is almost certainly a clawback clause in your loan agreement. This typically requires you to repay a portion of the original cashback if you leave within three to four years. The repayable amount usually reduces proportionally over the clawback period. Check your loan agreement carefully.
Expect to pay between $900 and $1,800 for a solicitor to handle the mortgage discharge and new registration. Some lenders offer to cover up to $1,000 of legal costs as part of a refinance package.
If a registered valuation is required, budget $700 to $1,200. Many refinances avoid this cost entirely through automated valuations.
| Cost Item | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed-rate break fee | $0 – $10,000+ | Depends on rate movements and time remaining |
| Cashback clawback | $0 – $15,000 | Proportional to time since original cashback received |
| Legal / conveyancing | $900 – $1,800 | Often subsidised by new lender |
| Registered valuation | $700 – $1,200 | Only required in some cases |
| New lender establishment fee | $0 – $500 | Many lenders waive this for refinances |

Timing a refinance well can make a significant difference to the outcome. Here are the scenarios where switching lenders is most likely to make financial sense.
The 60-day window before your fixed rate rolls over is the ideal time to shop around. Most banks will allow you to lock in a new rate up to 60 days before your current term ends, meaning you can secure a competitive offer from a new lender without incurring any break fees. This is the single most common and straightforward refinance scenario.
If interest rates have fallen sharply since you fixed your loan, it may be worth paying a break fee to access the lower rate — provided the savings over your remaining term exceed the cost of breaking. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand publishes regular updates on the Official Cash Rate, which influences the direction of mortgage rates. Monitoring OCR decisions helps you anticipate where rates are heading.
If your property has increased in value since you bought it, your LVR may have improved enough to qualify for a lower rate tier. Many lenders offer meaningfully better rates for borrowers with LVRs below 80%, and even better rates below 60%. A refinance can formalise that improved position.
A higher income, cleared debts, or a stronger credit profile since you first took out your loan may mean you now qualify for products or rates that were previously out of reach.
| Objective | Ideal Condition | Recommended Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Lower repayments | Rates falling or stable | Refinance at fixed-rate expiry |
| Pay off loan faster | Strong cash flow | Shorten term or add offset/revolving credit |
| Release equity | Property value has risen | Top-up or restructure at refinance |
| Rate certainty | Rates expected to rise | Lock in 2–3 year fixed before OCR increases |
| Debt consolidation | High-interest debts outstanding | Roll into home loan — but extend carefully |

New Zealand’s mortgage market is dominated by the four major banks — ANZ, ASB, BNZ, and Westpac — along with Kiwibank and a growing number of non-bank lenders. Each has different strengths when it comes to refinancing.
Before settling on a lender, it pays to model your repayments under different scenarios. The BNZ mortgage calculator and the ANZ home loan calculator both let you estimate repayments at different rates and terms. For a BNZ-specific refinance scenario, the BNZ home loan calculator is particularly useful for comparing fixed versus floating repayment structures.
When evaluating lenders, consider:
Consumer NZ periodically surveys mortgage holders on their satisfaction with lenders. Checking Consumer NZ’s banking and mortgage research before committing to a new lender can give you a useful independent perspective on service quality and complaint handling.

Rolling personal loans, car finance, or credit card balances into your home loan is one of the more appealing reasons to refinance — and one of the most misunderstood. The interest rate reduction is real and often dramatic: moving debt from 15–20% personal loan rates into a home loan sitting near 6–7% can reduce your monthly interest cost substantially.
However, the risk is equally real. Home loans run for 20 to 30 years. If you consolidate a $20,000 personal loan into your mortgage and only make minimum repayments, you could end up paying far more in total interest than you would have on the original personal loan, simply because the debt is spread over a much longer period. The discipline required is to either maintain higher repayments on the consolidated amount, or use a revolving credit or offset facility to pay it down aggressively.
Rule of thumb: Only consolidate debt into your home loan if you have a credible plan to pay off the consolidated amount faster than the home loan term — not slower.

A refinance application is assessed on the same criteria as any new home loan. Lenders will look at:
If your financial situation has changed since you first took out the loan — reduced income, new dependants, or additional debt — you may find a refinance more difficult than expected. In that case, a mortgage adviser can help identify lenders whose credit policies are better suited to your circumstances.

Refinancing rewards preparation. Start by pulling together your current loan details and running the numbers — even a rough calculation using a home loan calculator will tell you whether the potential savings justify the effort. If the numbers look promising, get a written break fee estimate from your current bank, check your loan agreement for clawback terms, and approach at least two competing lenders (or a mortgage adviser) for indicative offers. Compare the full cost picture — rate, cashback, legal fees, and clawback period — before making any commitment. The best refinance is one where you have done the maths, understood every cost, and chosen a lender you are confident will serve you well for the next fixed term and beyond.