How PMI Cancellation Works Under the Homeowners Protection Act
The Homeowners Protection Act of 1998 establishes two mechanisms for PMI removal on conventional loans. The first is borrower-initiated cancellation: when the borrower’s loan balance reaches 80% of the original value (based on the original amortization schedule and the lesser of purchase price or original appraised value), the borrower may submit a written request to the lender to cancel PMI. The lender must cancel PMI if the borrower is current on payments, has a good payment history (no 30-day late payments within the prior 12 months and no 60-day late payments within the prior 24 months), and certifies that there are no subordinate liens on the property. The second mechanism is automatic termination: the lender must automatically terminate PMI when the loan balance reaches 78% of the original value based on the original amortization schedule, regardless of whether the borrower requests it. This automatic termination applies even if the borrower has not contacted the lender. If the borrower is not current on payments at the time automatic termination would occur, the lender must terminate PMI as soon as the borrower becomes current.
How FHA MIP Is Calculated and Applied
FHA MIP consists of two components. The upfront MIP (UFMIP) of 1.75% is calculated on the base loan amount and is almost always financed into the loan, increasing the total loan balance. For a $300,000 FHA loan, the UFMIP is $5,250, bringing the total loan amount to $305,250. The annual MIP is calculated on the outstanding loan balance each year. At an annual rate of 0.55% on a $305,250 balance, the first year’s MIP is approximately $1,679, or about $140 per month. As the loan balance decreases through amortization, the monthly MIP payment decreases slightly each year. However, because the annual MIP is required for the life of the loan (for borrowers who put less than 10% down), the total MIP cost over a 30-year term is substantial — often exceeding $40,000 on a $300,000 loan . This ongoing cost is why many FHA borrowers refinance into conventional loans once they have sufficient equity and credit scores to qualify.
How Lender-Paid Mortgage Insurance Differs from Borrower-Paid
With borrower-paid monthly PMI (BPMI), the borrower pays a separate monthly premium that appears as a line item on the mortgage statement. This premium is cancelable under HPA rules. With lender-paid mortgage insurance (LPMI), the lender pays the PMI premium to the insurance company and compensates by charging the borrower a higher interest rate. The rate increase is permanent for the life of the loan — it does not decrease when the borrower reaches 20% equity. The advantage of LPMI is a lower monthly payment in the near term (no separate PMI line item), and the higher interest may be tax-deductible as mortgage interest (unlike PMI premiums, whose deductibility is uncertain). The disadvantage is that the borrower pays the equivalent of mortgage insurance for the entire loan term unless they refinance. LPMI is most suitable for borrowers who expect to refinance within a few years or who benefit more from the potential tax deduction on a higher interest rate than from a lower rate with a non-deductible PMI premium.
Requesting Early PMI Cancellation Based on Home Value Appreciation
Some lenders and servicers allow borrowers to request PMI cancellation before the original amortization schedule reaches 80% LTV, provided the borrower can demonstrate through a new appraisal that the home’s current value results in an LTV of 80% or less. This path is not guaranteed by the HPA (which uses original value) but is permitted by many servicers as a matter of policy. Typically, the borrower must have made at least 24 monthly payments (some servicers require 24 to 60 months of seasoning) , be current on the mortgage with no late payments, and pay for a new appraisal ordered through the servicer (not a borrower-obtained appraisal). If the new appraisal supports an LTV of 80% or less, the servicer cancels the PMI. If the appraisal does not support cancellation, the borrower loses the cost of the appraisal with no refund. Borrowers considering this path should request the servicer’s specific requirements before ordering the appraisal.
Comparing Total Mortgage Insurance Costs Across Programs
When comparing loan programs, the total cost of mortgage insurance over the expected hold period is more informative than the monthly premium alone. A conventional loan at 95% LTV with PMI of 0.65% per year may appear more expensive monthly than an FHA loan with annual MIP of 0.55%, but the conventional PMI can be canceled after a few years while the FHA MIP persists for the life of the loan. Over a 10-year hold period, the conventional borrower who cancels PMI in year 5 pays significantly less total insurance cost than the FHA borrower. Conversely, for a borrower with a lower credit score who pays conventional PMI at 1.0% or higher, FHA’s flat 0.55% rate may be the lower total cost even accounting for the life-of-loan duration. Running a side-by-side comparison that accounts for upfront costs, monthly premiums, cancellation timing, and interest rate differences is the most reliable way to identify the least expensive option.
Related topics include conventional loans explained, fha loans explained, fha vs conventional loans: a complete comparison, down payment requirements by loan type, and loan limits by county and program.