Housing & Real Estate

HELOC (Home Equity Line of Credit)

A revolving credit line secured by your home equity, allowing you to borrow money as needed up to a preset limit.

Also known as: home equity line of credit, home equity line

What You Need to Know

A HELOC works like a credit card secured by your home. You're approved for a maximum credit limit based on your home equity, and you can draw funds as needed during a "draw period" (typically 10 years), then repay during a "repayment period" (typically 10-20 years).

How Much Can You Borrow: Most lenders allow you to borrow up to 85% of your home's value minus what you owe on your mortgage.

Example:

  • Home value: $400,000
  • Mortgage balance: $250,000
  • Maximum HELOC: ($400,000 × 85%) - $250,000 = $90,000

Draw Period (Years 1-10):

  • Borrow up to your limit whenever needed
  • Usually pay interest-only payments
  • Variable interest rate (typically prime rate + margin)
  • Can re-borrow paid amounts (revolving credit)

Repayment Period (Years 11-30):

  • Can't borrow anymore
  • Pay principal + interest
  • Monthly payments increase significantly

Common Uses: ✅ Home renovations (increases home value) ✅ Debt consolidation (lower interest than credit cards) ✅ Emergency fund backup ✅ Investment opportunities

Advantages:

  • Only pay interest on what you use
  • Lower rates than credit cards or personal loans
  • Tax-deductible if used for home improvements
  • Flexible access to funds

Risks: ⚠️ Your home is collateral

  • Default = foreclosure ⚠️ Variable rates
  • Payments can increase if rates rise ⚠️ Payment shock
  • Repayment period payments much higher ⚠️ Overspending temptation
  • Easy access to large amounts

HELOC vs Home Equity Loan:

  • HELOC: Revolving credit, variable rate, draw as needed
  • Home Equity Loan: Lump sum, fixed rate, fixed payments

When to Use a HELOC:

  • You need flexible access over time (renovation project phases)
  • You have irregular expenses to cover
  • You want lower initial payments

When to Avoid:

  • You can't afford if rates increase 2-3%
  • You lack discipline with credit
  • You're close to retirement (risky to carry into retirement)

Sources & References

This information is sourced from authoritative government and academic institutions:

  • consumerfinance.gov

    https://www.consumerfinance.gov/ask-cfpb/what-is-a-home-equity-line-of-credit-heloc-en-106/

HELOC: Tap Home Equity With Revolving Credit