Fixed vs. Adjustable Mortgages

Fixed vs. Adjustable Mortgages: Pros & Cons | Invorya
Open fields and horizon – mortgage choices
Mortgages • 7 min read

Fixed vs. Adjustable Mortgages: Pros & Cons

Understand how fixed-rate and ARM loans work, who they fit, and the risks to watch before you lock in.

Fixed vs ARM — Quick Compare

Tweak any input. We’ll show today’s payment and a “first reset” stress case for the ARM using cap limits.

Fixed-Rate
Estimated Monthly (PITI+HOA)
$—
ARM
ARM Monthly Now
$—
ARM at First Reset (worst-case)
$—
Hold period check: I plan to keep this loan for years.

How Each Loan Type Works

Fixed-Rate Mortgage

Your interest rate and monthly principal & interest never change. Predictable budgeting over the full term (e.g., 15 or 30 years).

Adjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM)

Introductory fixed period (e.g., 5/1, 7/1, 10/1), then the rate adjusts at set intervals based on an index + margin, subject to caps.

Pros & Cons at a Glance

Fixed – Pros
  • Payment stability for long-term planning
  • Protection if market rates rise
  • Simpler to compare across lenders
Fixed – Cons
  • Higher starting rate vs. some ARMs
  • Refi needed to benefit if rates fall
ARM – Pros
  • Often lower initial rate & payment
  • Savings if you sell/refi before first reset
  • Rate caps limit how fast increases happen
ARM – Cons
  • Payment may increase after the intro period
  • Complex terms: index, margin, caps, frequency
  • Less suitable if you’ll keep the loan long-term

Who Is Each Option Best For?

Choose Fixed if you plan to own the home for many years, prefer budgeting certainty, or worry about rising rates.

Consider an ARM if you’re likely to sell, refinance, or upgrade within the fixed intro window (e.g., 5–7 years), and you understand the cap structure.

ARM Mechanics: Index • Margin • Caps

  • Index: A market benchmark (e.g., SOFR). It moves with market conditions.
  • Margin: A fixed number added to the index; together they form your fully indexed rate.
  • Caps: Limits on how much the rate can change—per adjustment and over the life of the loan (e.g., 2/1/5).
Example: 5/1 ARM with 2/1/5 caps → first change up to +2%, each following change up to +1%, lifetime increase capped at +5% over the start rate.

Simple Rule of Thumb

If you expect to keep the mortgage longer than the ARM’s fixed period, a competitive fixed rate is usually safer. If you’re confident you’ll move/refi before the first reset, an ARM’s lower intro rate can save money.

Next Step: Compare Payments

Run both scenarios—fixed vs. ARM—using your real numbers (price, down payment, APR, and term). Review the payment at closing and a “stress test” payment if the ARM hits caps at first adjustment.

FAQs

What does “5/1 ARM with 2/1/5 caps” actually mean?

The rate is fixed for 5 years, then adjusts every 1 year. At the first adjustment it can rise up to +2% over the start rate, future adjustments up to +1% each, and it can never exceed +5% over the start rate across the loan’s life.

How risky is an ARM compared to a fixed loan?

Risk depends on how long you’ll keep the loan and where rates go. If you’ll sell or refinance within the fixed intro period, an ARM can save money. If you’ll keep it longer, the fixed payment certainty may be worth it.

Can I refinance an ARM later?

Yes. Many borrowers refinance before or after the first reset if rates and closing costs make sense. Always compare the total cost, not just the APR.

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