Stop Paying Five Different Interest Rates When One Would Cost You Less
If you’ve got a mortgage, a couple of credit cards, maybe a car payment or a personal loan, here’s a question worth asking: do you actually know what you’re paying, blended, across all of it?
Most homeowners don’t. They know their mortgage rate. That’s the number they remember, the number they got a good deal on, the number they’d tell you at a barbecue. But that’s not the number running your monthly budget. The number running your budget is the average of everything — mortgage, cards, whatever else is out there collecting interest every month. And for a lot of people right now, that blended number is a lot uglier than the mortgage rate alone.
The Numbers Aren’t Small
National credit card debt just hit $1.25 trillion. Average interest rates on that debt are north of 20%. Meanwhile, the average homeowner is sitting on more than $250,000 in equity they’ve never touched.
That’s not a coincidence worth ignoring. That’s a mismatch. You’ve got an asset earning you nothing sitting right next to debt costing you 20%+. That’s the math I’d want fixed if it were my numbers.
Why People Don’t Fix It
I get it. Nobody wants to touch their mortgage. You locked in a good rate, you protected it, and the idea of moving it feels like giving something up. I’ve had that conversation more times than I can count.
Here’s what I tell people: you’re not being asked to give up a good decision. You’re being asked to look at the whole picture instead of one piece of it. Your mortgage rate by itself might be great. Your blended rate — mortgage plus five different interest-bearing balances — might be a different story entirely. That’s the number that matters when you’re deciding what to do next.
One Payment Beats Five
Right now you’ve probably got five due dates, five interest rates, five minimum payments to track. A refinance or a home equity line takes all of that and turns it into one number, one date, one rate.
Sometimes the mortgage piece of that new number goes up a little. But the total — everything combined — usually goes down. Sometimes by a lot. That’s not a sales pitch. That’s just what happens when you stop paying 20%+ interest on multiple balances and roll it into something closer to mortgage-level rates.
What Waiting Actually Costs
Doing nothing feels like the safe option. It’s not. Every month you wait, that credit card debt keeps compounding at 20%+. The debt doesn’t shrink while you think it over — it grows. The “safe” choice is actually the expensive one here. The move that feels riskier — restructuring it — is usually the one that costs you less every single month going forward.
This Isn’t a Rescue. It’s a Reallocation.
You already own the equity. This isn’t about bailing you out of anything. It’s about using what you’ve already built, more efficiently, so your money stops leaking out the side door in interest payments and starts working for you instead.
No pressure, no deadline, no “act now before rates change” nonsense. Just know your numbers. Then decide.
See What Your Numbers Actually Look Like
You don’t need to guess at this. Run your real numbers — your actual mortgage, your actual balances — and see what one payment looks like instead of five.
Check your equity and see your options →
No obligation. Just the math, laid out straight.






