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Mortgage Education · West Valley, AZ · 2026

Can I Switch Lenders After Signing a Purchase Contract?

You’re under contract, the clock is ticking, and you just noticed your lender’s rate quietly crept up since pre-approval. Are you stuck? Here’s the honest answer — and how to protect yourself from this happening in the first place.

By Joe Hansen, NMLS# 217716 · Precision Mortgage, Peoria AZ · Updated 2026
Quick Answer

Yes — you can switch mortgage lenders at any point up until you sign your final closing documents, even after you’ve signed a purchase contract and gone under contract on a home. There’s no law or rule that locks you into a single lender simply because you’ve made an offer. The real question isn’t can you switch — it’s should you, and how late is too late to do it safely. That’s what this guide walks through.

I have this conversation more often than you’d think, and almost always with a frustrated buyer on the other end of the phone. They got pre-approved with one lender, found a home, went under contract — and then somewhere between pre-approval and the closing table, the numbers started shifting. The rate crept up. A few extra fees appeared on the Loan Estimate that weren’t mentioned upfront. Suddenly the deal that looked great on paper three weeks ago doesn’t look so great anymore. If this is you, take a breath — you have more options than you probably realize.

41 Days
Average time to close a conventional purchase loan
$2,000–$3,000
Average savings reported by borrowers who compared a broker against direct lenders
Any Time
Before signing final closing documents — that’s your legal window

Your Legal Right to Switch Lenders

Let’s start with the part most buyers don’t realize: nothing in your purchase contract obligates you to a specific lender. As a mortgage broker here in Peoria, I tell every client the same thing upfront — you are the one in control of your financing, not the other way around. You have the right to change lenders at any point before you actually sign your final loan documents at the closing table. That right doesn’t disappear because you submitted an application, received a pre-approval letter, or even went fully under contract on a home.

What does change as you move through the process is the level of risk and complication involved in making that switch. Switching lenders the day after pre-approval is low-risk and simple. Switching two days before a scheduled closing is technically still possible, but it’s a different conversation entirely — one involving real deadlines, your earnest money, and the seller’s patience. Timing is everything here, which is exactly why this decision deserves a clear-eyed look rather than a panicked one.

The Risk Timeline: When Switching Is Easy vs. When It’s Risky

Here’s how I walk clients through the real risk level at each stage of the process:

Before Pre-Approval
Shop freely. This is the ideal time to compare multiple lenders and brokers. No commitments, no risk, no downside. Low Risk
After Pre-Approval, Before Offer
Still very safe to switch. A pre-approval is a soft commitment — not a binding agreement. If a better rate or more responsive broker shows up here, switch without hesitation. Low Risk
After Offer Accepted, Early Under Contract
This is usually fine too. Underwriting for the new lender typically doesn’t begin until after you have a signed purchase agreement anyway, so switching shortly after going under contract rarely costs you meaningful time — as long as your closing date isn’t right around the corner. Low Risk
Mid-Contract, Before Rate Lock
Still workable, but start moving with purpose. You’ll need to resubmit documentation and the new lender will need time to underwrite. If your closing date is more than three weeks out, this is generally manageable. Moderate
After Rate Lock or Appraisal Ordered
More complicated, but not impossible. You may forfeit your appraisal fee, and rate locks generally don’t transfer between lenders. If the savings are significant, it can still be worth it — but the math needs to clearly favor the switch. Moderate
Final 2–3 Weeks Before Closing
High risk territory. Conventional loans average 41 days to close, and government-backed loans like FHA and VA typically run 45–50 days. Switching this late means restarting much of that clock. You risk per diem fees to the seller, an extension request, or in the worst case, losing your earnest money if you can’t perform on time. High Risk
After Signing Final Closing Documents
Too late. Once you’ve signed at the closing table, your loan is in force. From this point forward, your only path to a different lender is a future refinance. Locked In

Why Your Rate or Fees Sometimes Increase After Pre-Approval

Here’s something every Arizona buyer should understand before they ever sign with a lender: the number you’re quoted at pre-approval is not always the number you end up with at closing — and in some cases, that’s not your fault at all. It’s the lender’s pricing model.

Some lenders intentionally quote competitive, attractive numbers during the pre-approval stage to win your business, knowing that buyers are far less likely to switch once they’re emotionally invested in a home and under contract. By the time the Loan Estimate is finalized — sometimes weeks later — the rate has crept up, an extra origination fee has appeared, or a “processing fee” shows up that wasn’t mentioned in the initial conversation. Buyers feel stuck, assume it’s normal, and absorb the cost rather than start over.

This pattern is exactly why working with a broker — someone who isn’t tied to a single lender’s pricing — matters so much, and exactly why I encourage every buyer in the West Valley to get a second opinion before they sign anything final.

Red Flags Worth Watching For

If your locked rate moves without a clear market-driven explanation, if new fees appear on your Loan Estimate that weren’t discussed upfront, or if your loan officer becomes vague or non-responsive when you ask direct questions about cost changes — these are signs worth taking seriously. A legitimate lender will walk you through exactly why a number changed. If they can’t, that’s information too.

Why Working with an Experienced Broker Protects You

This is precisely the problem a good mortgage broker is built to solve. Freddie Mac’s own research found that borrowers who got quotes from at least one mortgage broker in addition to direct lenders saved an average of $2,000 to $3,000 over the life of comparable loans. That’s not a marketing claim — that’s an independent finding, and it reflects something simple: when more than one set of eyes is comparing your loan terms, hidden cost creep gets caught early instead of at the closing table.

As a mortgage broker serving Peoria and the greater West Valley for over 20 years, my role isn’t to lock you into one lender’s product no matter what. I have relationships with multiple lending institutions, which means I can shop your specific scenario — your credit, your loan amount, your down payment — across several lenders simultaneously and show you the real numbers side by side. If your current lender’s pricing has drifted from what they originally quoted, I can tell you within minutes whether that drift is justified by market movement or whether it’s simply bad pricing practice.

The Honest Broker Difference

I’ve had clients come to me already under contract, frustrated that their original lender’s numbers had quietly gotten worse since pre-approval. In several of these cases, switching to a different lender — even accounting for a new appraisal fee — still saved the client more money than staying put, sometimes by a meaningful margin on a loan that size.

In other cases, I’ve reviewed a client’s existing terms and told them honestly: stick with what you have, the numbers are fair, switching isn’t worth the hassle. That’s the value of working with someone whose job is to give you a straight answer — not to win your business at any cost.

How West Valley Buyers Can Protect Themselves From the Start

The best way to avoid ever needing to switch lenders mid-contract is to set yourself up correctly from day one. Here’s what I recommend to every buyer I work with:

Get pre-approved by more than one source before you write an offer. Even a quick comparison between a broker and a direct lender gives you a real benchmark. Credit scoring models generally treat multiple mortgage inquiries within a short window — typically 14 to 45 days depending on the scoring model — as a single inquiry, so rate shopping early doesn’t meaningfully hurt your credit.
Get everything in writing, not just verbally quoted. A Loan Estimate is a federally standardized form that makes it easy to compare lenders apples to apples. If a lender resists putting numbers in writing early, that’s worth noticing.
Ask directly how the lender’s rate could change between now and closing. A transparent loan officer will explain rate lock policies, float-down options, and what market conditions could shift your number. Vague answers here are a warning sign.
Build a reasonable closing timeline into your purchase contract. If you want the flexibility to switch lenders if something goes wrong, a longer closing window gives you that room. A 21-day closing leaves almost no room to maneuver if problems surface.
Work with someone local who knows the West Valley market. A broker who closes loans regularly in Peoria, Surprise, Glendale, and Goodyear understands local title companies, typical appraisal turnaround times, and which lenders reliably close on schedule in this specific market — details that matter more than people expect.

If You Do Decide to Switch: What the Process Looks Like

If you’ve weighed the timing and decided switching makes sense, here’s the realistic step-by-step:

1. Get a real comparison first. Before canceling anything, get an actual Loan Estimate from the lender or broker you’re considering switching to. Compare it line by line against your current terms — rate, APR, origination fees, and total closing costs.
2. Confirm the new lender can hit your closing date. This is the single most important question. Ask directly: “Can you close by [date], given everything you know about my file right now?” Get a real answer, not a hopeful one.
3. Don’t cancel your current application until the new one is solid. Many experienced brokers recommend keeping your original lender’s file active as a backup until the new lender has issued a real approval. This protects you if something unexpected comes up.
4. Move documentation fast. Pay stubs, bank statements, tax returns — have everything ready to send immediately. The faster you respond, the faster underwriting can move.
5. Communicate with your real estate agent and the seller’s side. If there’s any chance the switch could affect your closing date, transparency now is far better than a surprise later. Sellers are generally more flexible when they’re informed early rather than at the last minute.

A Real Example: When Switching Was Worth It

$420,000 Loan · Surprise, AZ · Switched 18 Days Into a 35-Day Contract
Original Lender’s Rate (drifted from pre-approval) 7.125%
New Lender’s Rate (shopped through broker) 6.625%
Monthly Payment Difference ~$140/month
Cost to Switch (new appraisal + credit pull) ~$650
Break-Even Point Under 5 months

In this case, the buyer recovered the cost of switching in under five months and then kept the $140/month savings for the remaining 29+ years of the loan — well over $48,000 in savings over the life of the loan. The closing date moved by exactly six days, which the seller agreed to without issue once informed early. That’s a switch that was clearly worth it.

Already Under Contract and Wondering If Your Numbers Are Fair?

Send me your current Loan Estimate — no obligation, no pressure. I’ll tell you honestly whether your terms are competitive or whether shopping around could save you real money, even at this stage. If switching makes sense, I’ll tell you that too. If it doesn’t, I’ll tell you that as well.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will switching lenders hurt my credit score?
Not significantly, as long as you shop within a reasonable window. Credit scoring models are designed to treat multiple mortgage-related inquiries made within a short timeframe — typically 14 to 45 days depending on the specific scoring model used — as a single inquiry. The bigger credit risk during this period is opening new credit cards or taking on new debt, not comparing mortgage rates.
Does my purchase contract require me to use a specific lender?
Almost never. It’s uncommon for a purchase contract to name a specific lender as a binding requirement. Always read your contract carefully, but in the vast majority of standard Arizona purchase agreements, the financing contingency simply requires you to obtain financing that meets certain terms — not from any particular lender.
What happens to my earnest money if switching lenders delays my closing?
This depends on your contract’s financing contingency and how the seller responds. If you miss your closing date without an agreed extension, a seller technically has the right to cancel and keep your earnest money in some circumstances. This is exactly why timing and communication matter so much — informing your agent and the seller’s side early, rather than after a deadline has already passed, dramatically reduces this risk.
Can I switch lenders if I’m already locked into a rate?
Yes, but it’s a different calculation. Rate locks generally don’t transfer between lenders, so switching after locking typically means losing that locked rate and starting fresh with a new lender’s pricing. It can still make sense if the new terms are meaningfully better, but the math needs to clearly justify it — including any appraisal or application fees you may not recover.
Why would I use a broker instead of going directly to a bank?
A bank loan officer can only offer that bank’s own products and pricing. A broker has relationships with multiple lenders and can shop your specific scenario across several of them at once — which is exactly the mechanism that catches rate creep or excessive fees before you’re stuck with them. It’s also how Freddie Mac’s research found borrowers saving an average of $2,000 to $3,000 by getting at least one broker quote alongside direct lender quotes.
Is it too late to switch if I’m two weeks from closing?
It’s risky, but not automatically impossible. At this stage, the new lender needs to move very quickly, and you should have a frank conversation about whether they can realistically meet your existing closing date. If they can’t, you’ll need to discuss an extension with the seller — which may come with a per diem fee, typically a few hundred dollars per day. This is a decision that should be made with full information, not in a panic.

Get a Second Opinion Before You Sign Anything Final

Whether you’re just starting to shop for a mortgage, already pre-approved, or sitting under contract right now in Peoria, Surprise, Glendale, or anywhere in the West Valley — a quick conversation costs you nothing and could save you thousands. Let’s compare your numbers honestly.

Helpful Resources

Joe Hansen
Mortgage Loan Officer & Broker · NMLS# 217716 · AZ LO0911403

Joe Hansen is a licensed mortgage broker at Precision Mortgage in Peoria, AZ with over 20 years of experience helping Arizona homebuyers navigate financing with honesty and transparency. He works with multiple lenders to shop rates and terms for clients across Peoria, Surprise, Glendale, Goodyear, and the entire West Valley — specializing in helping buyers avoid hidden fees and rate creep during the homebuying process.

Precision Mortgage, Inc. | 14155 N 83rd Ave Ste 125, Peoria, AZ 85381 | NMLS# 217716 | AZ LO0911403. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Loan terms, timelines, and contract requirements vary by transaction. Always consult your purchase contract and a licensed real estate attorney or agent regarding contingencies and deadlines specific to your transaction. All loans subject to credit and income qualification.