Fee some lenders charge when a borrower pays off or refinances a loan early and cuts off expected interest income.
A prepayment penalty is a fee that some lenders charge when a borrower pays off, refinances, or otherwise retires a loan earlier than the contract expected.
Prepayment penalties matter because the headline rate on a loan is not the full story. A borrower who expects to sell, refinance, or make aggressive extra payments can discover that early-exit flexibility is expensive.
Lenders use prepayment penalties to protect expected interest income and discourage borrowers from leaving the loan too quickly after origination.
| Penalty type | What triggers it | Common borrower concern |
| — | — | — |
| Hard prepayment penalty | Early payoff for sale or refinance | Limits flexibility in almost any exit |
| Soft prepayment penalty | Usually refinance, but not ordinary sale | Mainly affects replacement-loan decisions |
| Declining penalty | Penalty shrinks over time | Timing of payoff becomes critical |
The exact rule depends on the loan documents. Some penalties are a fixed dollar amount, while others are based on a percentage of the remaining balance or a set number of months of interest.
A homeowner takes a mortgage that carries a two-year hard prepayment penalty. Six months later, market rates fall sharply and refinancing looks attractive. The refinance still may not make sense if the penalty and closing costs erase the rate savings.
Borrowers often focus on the new rate and ignore the exit cost on the old loan. The right comparison is net savings after the penalty, closing costs, and expected holding period.
Some loan contracts allow partial prepayments up to a limit, some penalize only full payoff, and some do not penalize sale in the same way they penalize refinance.
Refinancing: One of the most common situations where prepayment penalties become financially important.
Open Mortgage: Mortgage structure chosen partly to avoid large early-payoff penalties.
Call Premium: Similar early-redemption concept in bond markets rather than consumer or property loans.
Annual Percentage Rate (APR)"): Helps compare borrowing cost, but borrowers still need to read the loan contract for exit penalties.