What’s the Difference Between ARMs and Fixed-Rate Mortgages?

Fixed-Rate Mortgages

Fixed-rate mortgages are safe and predictable. You’ll know how much you’ll pay every month for entire term of your loan. But your interest rate is typically higher than the starting rate on an ARM, so your monthly payment is also higher, at least in the early years. Fixed-rate loans keep the same interest rate throughout the life of the loan. You’ll also keep the same monthly payment as a result. There won’t be any surprises, no matter what interest rates or the economy do while you’re paying down your mortgage. You’ll pay a price for this predictability, however. Fixed-rate loans typically start with a slightly higher interest rate than ARMs.

Adjustable-Rate Mortgages (ARMs)

Nobody knows precisely what will happen with interest rates. It’s hard to predict the timing and the speed of interest rate changes even if you correctly guess which direction they’ll move (higher or lower). Adjustable-rate mortgages allow you to share the risk of that uncertainty with your lender. You pay less in return—at least in the early years. ARMs typically start out with a lower interest rate than fixed-rate loans. A lower rate results in a lower monthly payment, making cash flow more manageable. But ARMs feature an interest rate that can change as rates and the economy change. Your rate may decrease if interest rates fall, but your monthly payment will increase if they rise. Your rate may be fixed for one year, three years, five years, seven years, or even longer, but changes are possible after that point. The rate is fixed for five years (the first number listed) and can change annually after that (the second number shown) if you have a 5/1 ARM. Lenders typically base your rate on a popular benchmark such as LIBOR. As that rate moves, your loan follows. In most cases, your rate is the benchmark rate plus a spread (an additional amount on top of the benchmark). For example, your interest rate would adjust to 2.75% if LIBOR is at 2.5% and the spread on your loan is 2.25%. Rates might not change as much as the underlying benchmark if your loan has caps. You’d only experience an increase of 2% in your interest rate if your loan has a cap of 2%, but the index increases by 3%. Loans can use initial caps for the first few years, or they might use periodic caps (for each yearly adjustment), and lifetime maximums.

Which Is Right for You?

Evaluate your needs and pick the loan that best meets them. A fixed-rate loan is the safer choice if you have a tight budget and if any increases in your mortgage payment might be difficult to handle. You’ll pay more than an initial ARM payment, but you’ll never be caught by surprise, wondering where you’re going to come up with the extra money. It may also make sense lock in a low rate with a fixed-rate loan if you believe rates are likely to steadily rise in the coming years. But you can use an ARM’s relatively low monthly payment to prepay your mortgage and reduce your loan balance more quickly unless there’s a sharp increase in interest rates. Significant prepayments might manage the risk of an increase in future interest rates because the rate won’t matter as much with a smaller loan balance. An ARM allows your rate to drop without the need to refinance if rates fall. ARMs become more attractive if you don’t think you’ll be living in the property or paying on the property for decades. You might be comfortable using an ARM that adjusts after five or seven years if you’re only planning to keep your loan for six years.

Fixed-Rate Mortgage vs. ARM Example

The Bottom Line

Interest rates can rise or fall, so it’s critical to understand the potential risk of using an ARM. The lower payment might be appealing, but the strategy can backfire if interest rates rise substantially.