Nebraska variant. This is a Nebraska-specific version of the Refinance Calculator, using pre-defined local figures (tax rates, median home and income values, and typical regional costs). For the full formula, methodology, and FAQ, open the main Refinance Calculator.
Refinancing a Nebraska mortgage makes sense when the monthly interest savings recover your closing costs before you sell or move. On the state's $250,000 median home, even a small rate drop moves real money.
When refinancing pays off in Nebraska
Closing costs typically run 2-5% of the loan balance. On a $200,000 loan (80% of the $250,000 median home), that's roughly $6,000 at 3%.
Your break-even point is closing costs ÷ monthly savings. Drop your rate enough to save $200/month and you'd recover $6,000 in about 30 months - refinance only if you'll stay past that point.
About taxes and housing in Nebraska
Nebraska uses a graduated income tax, with a top marginal rate just under 6%.
Nebraska has comparatively high property taxes, with an effective rate around 1.6%, while median home values stay near $250,000.
Nebraska's economy is anchored by agriculture, food processing, insurance, and freight and rail transportation.
Worked example: break-even in Nebraska
Loan $200,000, closing costs ≈ $6,000 (3%). If a refinance cuts your payment by $250/month, break-even ≈ 24 months. Use the calculator above with your actual rates and balance.
Quick reference
- State income tax: 2.46-5.84% across 4 brackets
- State sales tax: 5.5% (plus 1.46% avg local)
- Median home value: $250,000
- Median household income: $71,722
- Effective property tax rate: 1.61%
- Avg auto insurance: $1,604/yr
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it worth refinancing in Nebraska?
It depends on your break-even: closing costs divided by monthly savings. If you'll keep the home past break-even, refinancing usually pays off.
What are typical closing costs in Nebraska?
Refinance closing costs generally run 2-5% of the loan, or roughly $6,000 on a median Nebraska loan.