VA IRRRL Streamline Refinance: The Fastest Way to Lower Your VA Rate
What Is the VA IRRRL?
The VA Interest Rate Reduction Refinance Loan — universally shortened to IRRRL and pronounced "Earl" — is a streamlined refinance program exclusively for veterans, active-duty service members, and eligible surviving spouses who already have an existing VA-backed home loan. It is sometimes called the VA Streamline Refinance.
The IRRRL exists for one purpose: to help eligible veterans lower their interest rate quickly and with minimal friction. The Department of Veterans Affairs designed this program to be as simple as possible. There is typically no appraisal required, no income verification in most cases, and the funding fee is the lowest in the entire VA loan program at just 0.5% of the loan amount. For veterans who purchased when rates were higher, the IRRRL can reduce monthly payments by hundreds of dollars.
VA funding fee on an IRRRL — the lowest fee in the entire VA loan program. On a $350,000 loan, that's just $1,750, and it can be financed into the new loan.
Eligibility Requirements
To qualify for an IRRRL, you must meet all of the following conditions:
1. You Must Have an Existing VA Loan
This is the foundational requirement. The IRRRL is only available to refinance an existing VA-guaranteed home loan. You cannot use it to refinance a conventional, FHA, or USDA loan — those require a VA Cash-Out Refinance instead (which has a full underwriting process). The property being refinanced must be your primary residence, or it must have been your primary residence at some point (many veterans who now rent out their VA-purchased home can still access the IRRRL).
2. Six-Payment Seasoning Requirement
You must have made at least 6 consecutive monthly payments on your current VA loan before you can IRRRL it. Additionally, at least 210 days must have passed since the first payment due date on your existing VA loan. This "seasoning" rule prevents lenders from repeatedly flipping veterans into new loans for fee income without providing real benefit.
3. Payment History
You generally cannot have had any late payments (30 days or more past due) in the 12 months preceding the IRRRL application. If your loan is less than 12 months old, lenders look at the entire payment history. One late payment may still be approvable with documentation of extenuating circumstances, but it requires manual underwriting.
4. Same Borrower(s)
The borrowers on the new IRRRL must be the same as on the existing VA loan. You can remove a non-veteran borrower from the new loan (common in divorces), but you cannot add new borrowers. If you want to add a co-borrower, you need a regular VA refinance instead.
Unlike a VA purchase loan (which requires primary residence occupancy at closing), the IRRRL only requires that the home was your primary residence when you originally purchased it. Veterans who have since converted their VA-purchased home to a rental property can often still qualify for an IRRRL. Always disclose current occupancy status accurately on your application.
Already have a VA loan? Let's see if an IRRRL makes sense.
Share your current rate and loan balance — Carlos will run the numbers and tell you exactly what you'd save. Free analysis, no credit pull.
Check My IRRRL Savings →Net Tangible Benefit Rule
The most important underwriting standard unique to the IRRRL is the Net Tangible Benefit (NTB) requirement. Federal law (38 U.S.C. § 3709) requires lenders to document that every IRRRL provides a concrete financial benefit to the veteran. Lenders who fail to document NTB face VA sanctions and potential repurchase demands. Here is how NTB works in practice:
Fixed-Rate to Fixed-Rate IRRRL
If you are refinancing one fixed-rate VA loan into another fixed-rate VA loan, the new interest rate must be at least 0.50 percentage points lower than your existing rate. Example: if your current VA loan is at 7.25%, your new rate must be 6.75% or lower.
Adjustable-Rate to Fixed-Rate IRRRL
If you are refinancing an adjustable-rate VA loan (VA ARM) into a fixed-rate loan, the new fixed rate simply needs to be lower than your current ARM rate. This is the most beneficial scenario — you lock in a lower fixed rate and eliminate rate uncertainty in one step.
Fixed-Rate to Adjustable-Rate IRRRL
Refinancing from a fixed rate to an ARM requires that the new rate be at least 2.0 percentage points lower than the existing fixed rate. This reflects the added risk of transitioning to a variable rate and the potential that the rate could rise above the original fixed rate in future years.
Recoupment Period
In addition to the rate reduction test, VA regulations also require that all fees, expenses, and closing costs (not including taxes, insurance, and VA funding fee) be recouped within 36 months from the date of loan closing. This prevents veterans from paying large closing costs for minimal rate savings. The recoupment calculation is: total fees divided by monthly payment reduction must equal 36 months or less.
No Appraisal, Minimal Income Documentation
Two of the IRRRL's most attractive features are the waiver of the appraisal and the reduced income documentation requirements. Understanding when and how these apply is important:
No Appraisal Required
Unlike a conventional or FHA refinance, the VA IRRRL does not require a new property appraisal in most cases. This provides two major benefits:
- Speed: Eliminating the appraisal typically shortens the loan process by 1–3 weeks
- No equity trap: Veterans who are underwater on their VA loan (owe more than the home is worth) may still qualify, since the loan amount is based on the payoff balance, not the current appraised value. This was particularly valuable during periods of declining home prices.
Note: Some lenders may order a desktop appraisal or automated valuation model (AVM) for their own risk management, even when the VA does not require one. If your lender requires an appraisal, ask why and whether a no-appraisal option is available.
No Income Verification (Typically)
The VA does not require income verification for standard IRRRL transactions. You typically do not need to provide pay stubs, W-2s, tax returns, or employment verification letters. However, there are exceptions:
- If you are adding or removing a borrower, income verification is required
- If the new IRRRL results in a payment increase of more than 20%, income verification may be required
- Individual lenders may impose overlays requiring documentation regardless of VA guidelines
No appraisal. No income docs. Just a lower rate.
The IRRRL is one of the fastest refinance products in the mortgage industry. Get your IRRRL quote from Carlos — wholesale pricing, no lender fees.
Get My IRRRL Quote →Funding Fee: 0.5%
The VA funding fee for an IRRRL is 0.5% of the loan amount — the lowest fee in the entire VA loan program, and it applies regardless of whether this is your first or subsequent use of VA loan benefits.
| VA Loan Type | Down Payment | Funding Fee (1st Use) | Funding Fee (Subsequent) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purchase | 0% | 2.15% | 3.30% |
| Purchase | 5%–9.99% | 1.50% | 1.50% |
| Purchase | 10%+ | 1.25% | 1.25% |
| IRRRL (any use) | N/A | 0.50% flat | |
| Cash-Out Refi | N/A | 2.15% | 3.30% |
Funding Fee Exemptions
The same exemptions that apply to VA purchase loans also apply to the IRRRL. You pay zero funding fee if you are:
- Receiving VA compensation for a service-connected disability rated 10% or higher
- Entitled to receive VA compensation but receiving active-duty pay instead
- An active-duty recipient of the Purple Heart
- An eligible surviving spouse of a veteran who died in service or from a service-connected disability
If you have a pending VA disability claim and are unsure of your rating at the time of closing, you may be eligible for a funding fee refund after your disability rating is established. See our complete VA Funding Fee guide for details on the refund process.
How to Pay the IRRRL Funding Fee
You have two options for paying the 0.5% funding fee:
- Finance it into the loan: The most common approach. The fee is added to your new loan balance. This avoids any out-of-pocket cost but slightly increases your monthly payment and total interest paid.
- Pay it upfront at closing: If you have the funds available and want to keep your loan balance lower, you can pay the fee in cash at settlement.
On a $300,000 IRRRL, the 0.5% funding fee is just $1,500. Financed into the loan, this adds less than $10 per month to your payment on a 30-year term — an extremely modest cost relative to the rate savings most veterans achieve.
Processing Timeline: ~30 Days
A well-managed VA IRRRL typically closes in 20 to 40 days from the application date. Here is a realistic week-by-week breakdown:
- Days 1–3: Application, initial disclosures, intent to proceed. Carlos submits the loan to the wholesale lender.
- Days 4–10: Lender processes the file. Title search is ordered. No appraisal scheduling needed, which compresses the timeline significantly.
- Days 11–20: Underwriting review. Because there's no income verification and no appraisal, most IRRRLs clear underwriting in 3–7 business days at well-staffed lenders.
- Days 21–25: Clear to close issued. Closing disclosure sent (must be received 3 business days before closing).
- Days 26–30: Closing. Note: VA requires a 3-business-day right of rescission for refinances on primary residences — the loan does not fund until after that window expires.
Working with a mortgage broker like Carlos gives you access to multiple wholesale VA lenders simultaneously. Carlos submits to the lender with the best combination of rate, timeline, and pricing for your specific situation — rather than being locked into one retail bank's pipeline and processing queue. This competitive access routinely shaves 1–2 weeks off the timeline.
Closing Costs and Rolling Them In
Even though the IRRRL is "streamlined," it still has closing costs. VA regulations govern what fees can be charged on an IRRRL. Allowable costs include:
- VA funding fee (0.5%)
- Title search and title insurance
- Recording fees
- Credit report fee
- Discount points (if you choose to buy down the rate)
- Origination fee up to 1% of the loan amount (lenders may charge either a flat 1% origination or itemized allowable fees — not both)
Financing Closing Costs Into the Loan
VA regulations allow you to finance all IRRRL closing costs into the new loan amount, provided the total loan does not exceed the payoff balance of the existing VA loan plus allowable closing costs. This means you can close your IRRRL with literally zero money out of pocket — nothing due at settlement. The tradeoff is a slightly higher loan balance and monthly payment, but the net payment reduction from your lower rate almost always outweighs this.
Find out your break-even point
Carlos will calculate exactly how many months until your IRRRL pays for itself — and show you total savings over the remaining loan term.
Get Free Break-Even Analysis →IRRRL vs. Regular VA Cash-Out Refinance
Veterans often ask about the difference between the IRRRL and the VA Cash-Out Refinance. These are two very different loan products:
| Feature | VA IRRRL | VA Cash-Out Refinance |
|---|---|---|
| Existing VA loan required? | Yes — mandatory | No — can refinance any loan type |
| Cash back at closing? | No | Yes — up to 100% LTV (most lenders cap at 90%) |
| Appraisal required? | No (usually) | Yes — always |
| Income verification? | No (usually) | Yes — full documentation |
| Funding fee | 0.5% (lowest) | 2.15% / 3.30% |
| Processing time | ~30 days | 30–60 days |
| Net tangible benefit required? | Yes | No formal NTB test |
If your goal is purely to lower your rate with minimum friction, the IRRRL wins on every metric except the obvious one: you cannot take cash out. Veterans who need funds for home improvements, debt consolidation, or other purposes should look at the VA Cash-Out Refinance, accepting the higher funding fee and more thorough underwriting in exchange for access to their equity.
When the IRRRL Makes Sense
The IRRRL is a powerful tool — but it is not always the right move. Here is how to think through the decision:
Strong IRRRL Candidates
- Veterans who bought at 2022–2023 peak rates: If your VA loan is at 6.5%–8.5% and current rates have dropped meaningfully, the IRRRL offers the fastest path to significant savings
- Veterans with VA ARMs: Converting from a VA adjustable-rate mortgage to a fixed rate provides both rate reduction and payment certainty
- Veterans who plan to stay in the home: The longer you hold the loan post-IRRRL, the greater the total savings. Short-timers may not recoup closing costs
- Veterans in their early-to-mid loan term: The most interest is paid in the early years of an amortizing loan. Reducing the rate early has exponential savings benefits
When to Pause and Evaluate
- If you're close to your payoff date: Refinancing a loan with only 5–8 years remaining restarts the amortization schedule on a new 30-year term, potentially increasing total interest paid even at a lower rate — unless you choose a shorter term
- If closing costs are very high: The 36-month recoupment rule exists for a reason. If a lender is charging excessive fees, the break-even may never occur
- If you plan to sell or move soon: Costs must be recouped before the loan is paid off or assumed
Ready to see if an IRRRL makes sense for your VA loan?
Carlos works with VA-approved wholesale lenders in Illinois and Indiana to find the lowest IRRRL rates available. Free analysis — no credit pull required to get your estimate.
Get My IRRRL Rate Quote →Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use the VA IRRRL to get cash out?
No. The VA IRRRL is a rate-and-term refinance only. You cannot receive cash back at closing beyond a small reimbursement for any overpayment on your payoff. If you need cash from your equity, you would need a VA Cash-Out Refinance instead, which has different requirements including a new appraisal, income verification, and a higher funding fee (2.15%–3.30%).
What is "net tangible benefit" for the VA IRRRL?
Net tangible benefit (NTB) is a VA requirement that proves the refinance actually benefits the veteran. For a fixed-to-fixed rate IRRRL, the new rate must be at least 0.5% lower than the existing rate. For an ARM-to-fixed refinance, the new fixed rate just needs to be lower than the current ARM rate. Lenders are required to document NTB on every IRRRL transaction under federal law (38 U.S.C. § 3709).
Do I need to be current on my mortgage to use the IRRRL?
Generally yes. VA guidelines require at least 6 consecutive monthly payments on your current VA loan and no late payments in the last 12 months. 210 days must also have passed since your first payment due date. One late payment may be approvable with documentation but typically requires manual underwriting.
Can I IRRRL into a shorter loan term?
Yes, with a caveat. If you shorten your term — e.g., from 30 years to 15 years — your monthly payment will likely increase. The VA allows this, but your payment cannot increase by more than 20% compared to your current payment. Net tangible benefit can be satisfied by the reduction in total interest paid over the life of the loan.
Is the VA IRRRL available in Illinois and Indiana?
Yes. The VA IRRRL is a federal program available in all 50 states. Carlos Palomino (NMLS #1227188) is licensed in both Illinois and Indiana and works with VA-approved wholesale lenders to process IRRRLs throughout both states.
How long does a VA IRRRL take to close?
A typical VA IRRRL closes in 20 to 40 days from application. Because there is no appraisal and income verification is minimal, the primary drivers of timeline are lender workload and title/escrow scheduling. Working with a wholesale broker can often shave weeks off the timeline compared to larger retail banks.