Lender-Paid Mortgage Insurance (LPMI): Pros and Cons
Lender-Paid Mortgage Insurance (LPMI) is an alternative to traditional borrower-paid PMI. Instead of you paying PMI separately, your lender pays it upfront — in exchange for a higher interest rate on your mortgage.
How LPMI Works
Your lender agrees to pay the mortgage insurance premium but increases your interest rate, typically by 0.25% to 0.50%. This spread compensates them for covering the insurance cost. The result: no monthly PMI line item, but a higher rate for the entire loan term.
Advantages of LPMI
- Lower monthly payment: Your all-in payment may be lower since the rate increase is often smaller than the PMI premium.
- Potential tax benefit: Mortgage interest is tax-deductible for many borrowers; standalone PMI deductibility varies by year.
- Simpler payment structure: No separate PMI line item on your statement.
Disadvantages of LPMI
- Higher rate forever: Unlike PMI which can be cancelled, the higher interest rate stays for the life of the loan unless you refinance.
- Harder to refinance: If rates rise, you can’t simply drop PMI to lower costs.
- More total interest paid: Over 30 years, the higher rate may cost more than PMI would have.
When LPMI Makes Sense
LPMI is most beneficial if you plan to sell or refinance within 5–7 years. In the short term, the savings from no PMI payment can outweigh the higher interest cost.
Conclusion
LPMI is a trade-off worth considering for short-term homeowners. Run the numbers for your specific situation and compare total costs over your expected ownership period.




