Unlike most people, I love ARMs, or adjustable-rate mortgages. Adjustable-rate mortgages have helped me save over $300,000 in mortgage interest expense since 2005 compared to if I had taken out 30-year fixed-rate mortgages.
Despite all the fear, uncertainty, and doubt surrounding ARMs, they have been one of the most powerful wealth-building tools in my financial life. By taking advantage of lower introductory rates and paying down principal whenever there's free cash, I have consistently reduced interest expense while maintaining flexibility.
In this post, I walk through a real-world case study that tackles one of the biggest fears surrounding ARMs: What happens if interest rates are much higher once the introductory fixed-rate period ends? Won’t the ARM holder pay the price and regret not choosing a 30-year fixed rate instead?
I’m convinced that much of the fear, anxiety, and even hostility we experience comes from not fully understanding the situation at hand. The more deeply we understand an issue, or a person, the less room there is for fear and hate.
Now let’s get started you open-minded, loving people.
My Expiring 7/1 ARM
Sadly, a 7/1 ARM I closed on in December 2019 is finally going to reset in December 2026.
Back in 2019, I refinanced my expiring $700,711 5/1 ARM at a 2.5 percent rate into a 7/1 ARM at a 2.625 percent rate. At the time, I could have locked in a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at about 3.375 percent. However, the spread between the ARM and the fixed-rate mortgage was too wide to be enticing. I also knew I would not keep the mortgage for anywhere close to 30 years. This was a fixer upper I bought in 2014 that was large enough for a family of three, but not ideal for a family of four.
Fast forward to today, and the mortgage balance stands at roughly $379,000, or about 45 percent lower than when I first refinanced in 2019, and $615,000 lower than the original amount in 2014. Frankly, I thought the balance would be even lower by now. However, when COVID hit in 2020, I decided to stop making extra principal payments and instead use the capital to buy the dip in risk assets.
That decision turned out to be financially rewarding, but it also meant slower mortgage amortization than initially planned.
As luck would have it, I do not have $360,000 lying around to pay off the mortgage before it resets in December 2026. I have already earmarked about $100,000 for capital calls in private closed-end funds. I also want to continue dollar-cost averaging into public equities and at least another $50,000 in Fundrise Venture this year for my children.
So the question becomes one that many ARM holders will face over the next few years.
What should you do with an expiring ARM, especially when interest rates today are materially higher than when you first took it out?
What To Do With an Expiring ARM
There are really only three options when an ARM reaches the end of its introductory fixed-rate period.
- Pay it off
- Refinance it
- Let it adjust
Because I never want to go through another mortgage application or refinance again if I can help it, refinancing is my least attractive option. I could sell assets to pay off the mortgage, but doing so would trigger capital gains taxes that I would rather avoid.
That leaves me with two realistic choices: pay it off slowly or let it adjust and manage the higher rate and payment intelligently.
After running the numbers, letting the ARM reset is the most logical decision. I believe it is the most logical decision for most people facing the same dilemma.

1) ARMs Have Rate Reset Caps and Lifetime Caps
One of the most misunderstood aspects of adjustable-rate mortgages is how rate increases actually work.
Before making any decision, I reached out to my mortgage officer to confirm the exact interest rate caps on my loan. My ARM has both an annual adjustment cap and a lifetime cap.
The maximum increase allowed at the first reset is 2 percent. The lifetime interest rate cap is 7.65 percent.
That means in the worst-case scenario, my interest rate would rise from 2.65 percent to 4.65 percent in December 2026 for the next 12 months. Even at 4.65 percent, the rate would still be about 1.35 percent lower than today’s average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage of roughly 6 percent.
Given this reality, the logical conclusion is to let the ARM adjust and reassess after the first year.
After the initial reset, the rate can adjust annually, again subject to a 2 percent cap per year. If mortgage rates stay elevated or rise further, I could theoretically end up paying a 6.65 percent mortgage rate in year nine of the loan (second year after adjustment).
By historical standards, a 6.65 percent mortgage rate is not terrible. It is close to the long-term average for U.S. mortgages. However, I think there is a good chance the second-year adjustment will be smaller than the full 2 percent cap.
If mortgage rates remain where they are today, the increase in year nine may only be about 1.5 percent, taking the rate to roughly 6.15 percent. If rates decline, the increase could be even less.
The key point is this: there is no urgency to act today. Waiting until the end of the first adjustment year provides far more information and flexibility.
2) Your Mortgage Payment Can Decline Even If the Rate Rises
The second and arguably most important thing to analyze when facing an ARM reset is not the interest rate itself, but the resulting monthly payment amount.
Here are my mortgage assumptions.
The loan is a $700,711 7/1 ARM structured as a 30-year amortizing mortgage originated in December 2019. When it resets in December 2026, there will be 23 years, or 276 months, remaining.
- Remaining balance: $379,000
- Current monthly mortgage payment: $2,814
- New rate for one year: 4.65 percent
- Monthly rate: 0.0465 divided by 12
- Remaining term: 276 months
My current monthly principal and interest payment is $2,814, with about $1,984 going toward principal and $830 toward interest.
After the reset, the new monthly payment would be approximately $2,238. That is $576 less than my original $2,814 payment when the loan was first originated. The reason is simple. I crushed the principal balance by 45 percent over the first seven years of the ARM.
Here is how the first month after reset would break down for my new $2,238 mortgage fixed for one year.
- Interest: approximately $1,469, which is about $630 more per month
- Principal: approximately $769, which is about $1,213 less per month
- Total payment: approximately $2,238
Emotionally, it feels bad to see more money going toward interest and less toward principal. However, the big picture is far more important than the month-to-month optics.
The Big Picture Takeaway on ARM Resets
Even though my interest rate jumps by a full 2 percent, my monthly payment still declines materially from $2,814 to $2,238.
At a sub-$400,000 balance, the ARM reset risk is largely neutralized.
If the rate were to rise another 2 percent in year nine (2nd year of reset), and assuming normal amortization, my monthly payment would increase to roughly $2,665, with about $2,050 going toward interest. That scenario would not be ideal, but it would still be manageable. The monthly payment is still $149 lower than my original mortgage for seven years of $2,814.
This is a textbook example of how aggressive early principal paydown turns future rate risk into a non-event.
3) Compare Your Mortgage Rate to the Risk-Free Rate
A 4.65 percent mortgage rate is still relatively low in absolute terms. However, it is now higher than the risk-free rate of return as measured by the 10-year Treasury yield.
When your mortgage rate exceeds the risk-free rate, the math becomes straightforward.
Any cash that would have gone into U.S. Treasuries should instead go toward paying down the mortgage. A guaranteed 4.65 percent return beats a guaranteed 4.2 percent return, for example. Of course, you need to still be aware of your liquidity needs as extracting liquidity out of a property can be more expensive.
Because my payment drops by $576 per month after the reset, I plan to keep paying at least the original $2,814 amount during the first year of adjustment. Doing so allows me to apply an extra $576 per month toward principal while remaining cash-flow neutral.
In addition, because the mortgage rate is higher than the risk-free rate, I will likely pay down at least an additional $20,000 in principal that year. That amount roughly matches what I would have otherwise invested in Treasuries.
Before the first year of adjustment ends, I will run this entire analysis again with updated rates, balances, and opportunity costs. So should you.
Let Your ARM Reset and Keep Paying Extra Principal
After going through this exercise, I believe most ARM holders facing higher interest rates should strongly consider letting their ARM reset and continuing to pay down extra principal strategically.
This approach minimizes friction, avoids refinancing costs, preserves optionality, and often results in the lowest total interest expense. The first year of the new rate could very well be materially lower than existing mortgage rates.
Refinancing can make sense if mortgage rates drop meaningfully. Refinancing a mortgage can easily take 30 to 60 days, involve a mountain of paperwork, and cost up to 1% – 2% of the loan balance. For most people, that is a costly and time-consuming pain.
Therefore, I would only refinance if the breakeven period is 18 months or less. The average homeownership tenure is only about 12 to 13 years, which means many homeowners overestimate how long they will actually benefit from a refinance.
Once you have enjoyed your introductory ARM period, realism matters more than theory. Overestimating how long you'll own a home by 17-18 years by getting a 30-year fixed rate mortgage at a higher rate is a suboptimal move for your finances.
An ARM Helps Me Boost Semi-Passive Income and Stay Free
Ultimately, I am satisfied my ARM is resetting by 2 percent while my monthly mortgage payment drops by $576.
This matters because I recently increased rental income on this property by $3,500 per month after renting out the entire home at market rates following tenant turnover. In the past, only the upstairs was rented out and the tenant had been there since the end of 2019 until mid-2025.
As a result, for this one property alone, my annual semi-passive income increases by $48,912 despite the higher interest rate.
I originally purchased the property in 2014 and lived in it for six years after fixing it up. It served as a wonderful home when it was just my wife and me, then when our son was born in 2017. It has appreciated decently, and is now a core part of our retirement income strategy.
Getting an ARM made it easier to buy the property in the first place. Keeping an ARM allows me to keep payments low while maintaining flexibility until the loan is gone.
My goal is to pay off the property by 2030, or within 16 years of purchase. That requires paying down an extra ~$50,000 in principal per year over the next five years. I am confident it will happen because I've now planned it out.
If I were a first-time homebuyer or purchasing another long-term property today, I would absolutely consider a 7/1 ARM or 10/1 ARM again. Over seven to ten years, at least 15 percent of the principal will be paid down, and there is a meaningful chance you move or sell before the ARM ever resets.
A 30-year fixed-rate mortgage provides peace of mind, but once you walk through realistic life scenarios, you may find that an ARM offers a better balance of savings, flexibility, and control.
Reader Questions
- If your ARM were resetting today, would you rather let it adjust or refinance for psychological peace of mind, even if it cost more?
- How aggressively did you pay down principal during your ARM’s fixed-rate period, and how does that affect your reset risk?
- Would you choose an ARM again for your next home purchase, or has today’s rate environment changed your perspective?
Invest In Real Estate Passively Without The Headaches
Although physical rental properties generate most of my retirement income, managing rentals is becoming a growing pain. As a result, I have been gradually selling my rental properties and redeploying the capital into private commercial real estate for fewer headaches and more peace of mind.
Consider Fundrise, a platform that allows you to 100% passively invest in residential and industrial real estate. With over $3.5 billion in private real estate assets under management, Fundrise focuses on properties in the Sunbelt region, where valuations are lower, and yields tend to be higher.
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Interesting take and it really shows how much strategy matters. For me, co investing in real estate has been the real unlock. Rather than focusing on a single mortgage structure I spread risk across multiple deals operators and markets while still benefiting from smart debt decisions made at the deal level. I may not be saving hundreds of thousands directly on interest but I am building diversified cash flow equity growth and flexibility without having to personally manage financing details. Different approaches, same goal, better long term results.
Sorry just a naive question but why pay down the mortgage so aggressively when you’re doing so much better than that with your investments?
Because it feels great to pay off debt. I loosely follow my FS DAIR ratio for paying down debt and investing. So with this Mortgage, are utilize about 80% of my cash flow to invest in 20% to pay down debt here and there, but interest rate rates or high.
I think you’ll enjoy this post as well: the triple benefit of paying off a mortgage early.
Kudos to you for using ARM’s as a finance tool. The problem today is lenders are not selling them. It is frankly shocking how many lenders don’t even know enough about the product to discuss ARM merits. Perhaps they make more money on a 30 year fixed so leave ARM’s on the shelf? Irregardless, it’s a good tool but few buyers or refinancers are presented with the option in my experience. Anyway, kudos to you for thinking outside the box ( again). Thanks for always writing such a great newsletter.
Good morning, Sam I wanted to add to another data point for you. Orange County and specifically Irvine, California saw a significant uptick in December for homes going under contract with multiple bidders stepping in to quickly get in. I spoke to my agent and she noted people are trying to beat the rush the anticipate comes as well.
I also took out a loan with First Republic bank in 2017. This was an investment home that was structured with a 10 year arm at 3.5%. That’s coming due soon and if that rate was to adjust to whatever the current rate is, that would be SOFR +2.25%. I believe that rate puts me at 9.95% (the maximum they can charge me). I feel like First Republic had some predatory lending at the time. My goal is to aggressively begin to pay this loan off between now and that date has to limit the impact of what the reset monthly payments would be. I may also consider refinancing, but the loan is pretty small at that point.
Great datapoint. Thanks for sharing. I’d definitely double check that reset rate of 9.95%. That seems egregious. But good to hear the loan is small. I would use 100% of cash flow to pay that off according to my FS DAIR framework!
I get why you took the arm in 2019 for 2.65, but why not refinance in 2020 or 2021 when the 30 year fell to 2.65 naturally? there were tons of no cost and money back refinances going on then. i did it twice in a one year span at 2.625 for 30 and fully recast the loan from 3.75. paying less interest even with recast was amazing. sadly we are now “stuck”. 3k mortgage for something that would be 7-8k today.
Good question! The cost to refi and laziness to do so with everything going on and a new daughter.
The mortgage balance is also a really small part of my net worth. So I felt like the savings really didn’t matter. I was already at 2.65%. But if I was at 3.75% like you, I definitely would’ve refinanced.
I hate going through the refi process. But this is a good post follow up I can write!
Have you looked into box spreads? Syntheticfi seems to have a compelling option, and outside of the prepayment penalty, it seems like a win (lower rates, tax deductibility).
One of the best things I did on last 5 years was close on a new house on 2021 and not pay cash – but instead got a 10/1 ARM structured as an I/O with no escrow at 2.25%. It such and asset and created a great opportunity benefit to invest those assets as spread and base rates widened and no could lock in long term income paying assets with call protection. Now I use the carry and maturities to pay make the payment and reduce principal (yes I understand I am taking credit risk). Did the same with my Liquidity Access Line where a 7y and 5y fixed terms were available (and one is due next month ugh lol). Always good to secure funding at low fixed rates that is non-MTM….
Woah, your $300k in interest expense savings is huge. That’s fantastic using ARMs enabled you to save that much for your properties!
Seeing the math in your upcoming reset is very insightful as well. That’s fascinating your payment will actually go down. And smart planning to continue paying as much as you are now so that more will go toward principal after the reset.
I think what you said about how fear and anxiety around ARMs and anything else we don’t fully understand is so true. It definitely is for me. I often have way more fear than necessary about something just because I lack knowledge or experience about it. Once I actually take the time to learn more about xyz, my fear goes way down or even disappears completely.
Helpful post, thanks!
Yes, I was pleasantly surprised myself how much mortgage interested I’ve saved since 2005 by going with ARMs. $300,000 is a meaningful amount for my family, so it has been a nice mental reprieve when I think about surprise costs or extra expenses that could bum me out.
I know this post wouldn’t be popular because 95% of homeowners take out 30-year fixed-rate Mortgages. But I hope it at least reduces any fear, uncertainty, and hatred towards a minority mortgage product.
Possibly a naive question, but if this is a rental, do you also need to be concerned that if you pay down the mortgage too far you can no longer deduct interest payments from the rental income? Ie, how much do you want to avoid paying taxes on rent and instead bank on capital appreciation.
Good point and good question. As a rental, there is still the significant non-cash depreciation expense one can use, even without a mortgage. But yes, as the mortgage goes down, the mortgage interest deduction also goes down. There is always going to be property tax and other maintenance expenses to do once the mortgage is gone.
As someone who is FIRE, I rely on this income to pay for our lifestyle. And taxes are an inevitable part of income and profitability.