If your mortgage payment includes PMI or MIP, you’re probably paying hundreds of dollars a month for insurance that protects the lender — not you.
The good news?
In many cases, you can remove it and lower your payment without refinancing… and sometimes much faster than you think.
Let’s break it down.
First: What’s the Difference Between PMI and MIP?
| Term | Applies To | What It Is |
|---|---|---|
| PMI (Private Mortgage Insurance) | Conventional loans | Required when you put less than 20% down |
| MIP (Mortgage Insurance Premium) | FHA loans | Required on almost all FHA loans |
They work similarly — but how you remove them is very different.
How to Remove PMI (Conventional Loans)
If you have a conventional loan, PMI is not permanent.
You can remove it when your loan balance reaches 80% of your home’s value.
That can happen in two ways:
Option 1 — Automatic Removal
When your loan hits 78% loan-to-value, the lender must remove PMI automatically.
No action required.
Option 2 — Early Removal
You can request PMI removal once you reach 80% loan-to-value, either through:
- Paying down the loan, or
- Your home’s value increasing
Most lenders allow this if:
- You have a good payment history
- Your home has not declined in value
- You provide an appraisal
Many homeowners qualify years earlier because home prices rose.
How to Remove MIP (FHA Loans)
FHA works differently.
If You Put Less Than 10% Down
MIP lasts for the life of the loan
The only way to remove it is to refinance into a conventional loan.
If You Put 10% or More Down
MIP drops off after 11 years
Why This Matters
MIP and PMI are expensive.
For many homeowners, they add:
- $150–$400 per month
- $1,800–$4,800 per year
That’s real money that could be going toward:
- Savings
- Investments
- Renovations
- Or simply breathing room in your budget
When Refinancing Makes Sense
Refinancing to remove MIP or PMI is powerful when:
- Your credit has improved
- Your home value has increased
- Rates are similar or lower
- You originally used FHA but now qualify conventional
This is one of the most common payment-reduction strategies homeowners miss.
How to Know If You’re Eligible
There are three numbers that matter:
- Your current loan balance
- Your home’s current value
- Your loan type (FHA vs conventional)
If your loan-to-value is at or below 80%, you may already qualify — even if your lender hasn’t told you.
Bottom Line
Removing PMI or MIP is one of the fastest ways to:
- Lower your payment
- Increase cash flow
- Improve long-term wealth
And many homeowners can do it sooner than they think.
If you want, I can run the numbers on your home and tell you exactly where you stand.