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Free US Home Equity Loan Calculator: Payments, CLTV & Consolidation

Model your second mortgage like a lender. Compare a fixed-rate Home Equity Loan vs. HELOC vs. Cash-Out Refi side-by-side. Check your CLTV underwriting limits, verify TCJA tax deductibility, and project your exact debt consolidation ROI—all in one free US tool.

Live CLTV Underwriting Fixed-Rate vs. HELOC TCJA Tax Deductibility Debt Consolidation ROI Second Mortgage Amortization Rate Sensitivity Matrix Free PDF Export No Account • No Email
🏠 Property & Equity
$
$
Live CLTV Eligibility — Updates As You Type
49.0% CLTV
✓ Qualifies at 680+ credit score
0%60%75%80%90%100%
✓ 680+ Credit → Eligible ✓ 700+ Credit → Eligible ✓ 740+ Credit → Eligible
Current Equity
$230,000
Max Borrowable
$140,000
$
%
$
🎯 Loan Purpose (affects IRS deductibility)
Interest likely deductible under IRS TCJA 2017 — funds used to buy, build, or substantially improve your home qualify. Subject to $750K combined mortgage debt limit.
Please check your inputs.
Estimates only. Rates reflect national averages. Tax information is educational, not tax advice. Consult a licensed tax professional.
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Select your calculator mode on the left and enter your details — then click Calculate Now to see your full results.

💡 How This Calculator Works
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How Our Home Equity Calculator Works: CLTV Limits & Amortization Math

A complete guide to home equity loans, CLTV eligibility, HEL vs HELOC vs Cash-Out Refi, IRS tax rules, and how every number in this calculator is calculated — step by step.

📌 Standard amortization formula 📌 Live CLTV eligibility engine 📌 IRS TCJA 2017 tax rules 📌 HEL vs HELOC vs Cash-Out Refi 📌 APR with closing costs 📌 Debt consolidation ROI
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What this calculator does — and why it matters
This tool uses the same math that US mortgage lenders use every day. You enter your home value, mortgage balance, and loan details — the calculator instantly figures out how much equity you have, whether your loan-to-value ratio (CLTV) qualifies at different credit score tiers, what your fixed monthly payment will be, and whether the interest is IRS-deductible under current TCJA 2017 rules. It also builds a full month-by-month amortization schedule and compares your HEL payment against a HELOC and a Cash-Out Refinance side-by-side so you can make an informed decision with real numbers — not guesses.
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Equity & CLTV
The calculator subtracts your mortgage balance (plus any other liens) from your home value to find your available equity. It then applies your selected LTV limit to compute your maximum borrowable amount and checks it against credit-score-based CLTV tiers in real time.
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Monthly Payment
Your fixed monthly payment is calculated using the standard annuity amortization formula — the same formula every US bank uses. Every dollar of every payment is split between interest (front-loaded early on) and principal (growing over time), producing a complete payoff schedule.
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Tax Deductibility
Based on the loan purpose you select and your tax bracket, the calculator checks IRS TCJA 2017 rules to estimate whether your interest qualifies as deductible and projects your Year 1 and lifetime tax savings. Only home improvement and purchase uses qualify — debt payoff does not.
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Compare & Decide
The Compare tab models the same cash need as a HEL, HELOC, and Cash-Out Refi simultaneously, highlighting the lowest total cost. The Consolidation tab calculates whether rolling high-rate debt into a home equity loan actually saves you money after accounting for the full term.
🏠 What Is a Home Equity Loan?

A Home Equity Loan (HEL) is a second mortgage that lets you borrow a lump sum against the equity you have built in your home. You receive all the funds at once and repay them at a fixed interest rate over a set term — typically 5 to 30 years. Your home is collateral, which is why rates are significantly lower than personal loans or credit cards.

Unlike a HELOC (which is revolving credit), a HEL gives you a single disbursement and a predictable, unchanging monthly payment for the life of the loan — making it ideal for defined, one-time expenses like a major renovation, medical bill, or tuition payment where you know the exact amount needed upfront.

Rate Type
Fixed — never changes after closing
Disbursement
Lump sum at closing
Typical Terms
5, 10, 15, 20, 30 years
Typical Rates (2026)
7.00% – 9.50% depending on LTV & credit
ℹ️ Your home is collateral. If you default on a home equity loan, the lender can foreclose. Always borrow only what you need and ensure the payment fits your budget before proceeding.
📊 CLTV — Your Eligibility Number

Combined Loan-to-Value (CLTV) is the single most important number lenders use to determine how much you can borrow. It measures the total of all loans secured by your home (first mortgage + any HEL or HELOC) as a percentage of your home’s current market value.

FormulaExample
CLTV = (Mortgage + HEL) ÷ Home Value ($280K + $80K) ÷ $450K = 80.0%
Max HEL = (Home Value × CLTV%) − Mortgage ($450K × 80%) − $280K = $80,000
CLTV Eligibility Zones by Credit Score
0–60% ✓ Excellent
61–75%
76–85%
86–90%+
0% 60% 75% 85% 90% 100%
680+ → up to 80% CLTV
700+ → up to 85% CLTV
740+ → up to 90% CLTV
Below 630 → typically declined
⚠️ These are general industry thresholds. Each lender sets their own CLTV limits. Some allow up to 90% or even 95% CLTV — but higher CLTV means higher risk to the lender and typically a higher interest rate for you.
🧮 How Your Monthly Payment Is Calculated — The Amortization Formula

Every fixed-rate loan — including a home equity loan — uses the same standard amortization formula to determine your monthly payment. This calculator applies this formula exactly as US mortgage lenders do:

VariableWhat It IsExample (Your Input)
M Monthly payment (what you pay each month) Calculated result
P Principal — your loan amount $80,000
r Monthly interest rate = Annual rate ÷ 12 7.47% ÷ 12 = 0.6225% / mo
n Total number of monthly payments = Term × 12 15 × 12 = 180 payments
M = P × [r(1+r)ⁿ] ÷ [(1+r)ⁿ − 1] = $80,000 × [0.006225 × (1.006225)¹⁸⁰] ÷ [(1.006225)¹⁸⁰ − 1] = $737.04 / month

Each payment splits between interest (your balance × monthly rate) and principal (the rest). Early payments are mostly interest; later payments are mostly principal. This is called front-loaded amortization — and it is why paying just a small extra amount each month early in the loan has a disproportionately large impact on total interest paid and payoff date.

💡 APR vs Interest Rate: When you add closing costs to the calculation, the calculator also computes your true APR (Annual Percentage Rate) using an iterative Newton-Raphson method — the same approach lenders use to produce the APR figure on your official Loan Estimate. APR is always ≥ the stated rate because it accounts for upfront fees.
🔄 HEL vs HELOC vs Cash-Out Refi — Full Product Comparison
Feature 🏠 Home Equity Loan
(HEL)
💳 HELOC
(Home Equity Line)
🔄 Cash-Out Refi
(Refinance)
Rate type Fixed Predictable Variable (Prime + margin) Fixed or ARM
Fund disbursement Lump sum at closing One-time needs Draw as needed (revolving) Lump sum at closing
Typical term 5–30 years 10-yr draw + 20-yr repay 15 or 30 years
Closes existing mortgage? No — second lien only No — second lien only Yes — replaces it entirely
Payment predictability Fully fixed Best budgeting Varies with rate & balance Fixed (if fixed-rate refi)
Closing costs (typical) $1,000–$3,000 $0–$1,500 2%–6% of loan (highest)
Tax deductibility If used for home improvement If used for home improvement Mortgage interest rules apply
Rate risk None — rate locked at closing High if Prime rate rises Low (fixed) or moderate (ARM)
Best for Known, one-time expenses Ongoing or uncertain costs Lowering first mortgage rate
✅ Potentially Tax-Deductible Uses

Under IRS TCJA 2017, home equity loan interest may be deductible on Schedule A if you use the funds to buy, build, or substantially improve the home that secures the loan. The $750,000 combined mortgage debt limit applies for joint filers ($375,000 for married filing separately).

Qualifying UseDeductible?
Kitchen / bathroom renovation✅ Yes
Room addition or structural work✅ Yes
Roof, HVAC, foundation repair✅ Yes
Solar panels or energy upgrades✅ Yes
❌ Non-Deductible Uses (TCJA 2017)

The TCJA 2017 eliminated the deduction for interest on home equity loans used for purposes unrelated to the home. If you use funds for any of the purposes below, the interest is treated the same as personal loan interest — not deductible, even if the loan is secured by your home.

Non-Qualifying UseDeductible?
Credit card or personal debt payoff❌ No
College tuition or education costs❌ No
Vehicle purchase❌ No
Vacation or living expenses❌ No
⚠️ Always consult a tax professional. These are general IRS guidelines. Your actual deductibility depends on how you document use of funds, whether you itemize deductions, your total qualified residence interest, and state tax law. The calculator’s tax estimates assume full qualification and are for educational planning only.
📈 How Equity Grows Over Time — What the Projections Show
Year 1
~Slow growth
Year 5
Momentum builds
Year 10
Significant equity
Payoff
Full home equity
Your home equity grows from two sources simultaneously: (1) loan principal paid down over time reduces what you owe, and (2) home appreciation (if any) increases what the home is worth. The calculator lets you enter an annual appreciation rate to project combined equity at 1, 5, 10, and 15 years. Even with zero appreciation, a 15-year HEL leaves you with significantly more equity than a 30-year loan because you pay principal down faster with each payment.
💰 How the Debt Consolidation Calculator Works

The Consolidation tab answers one question: “Would I actually save money by rolling my high-rate debt into a home equity loan?” The answer is not always yes — even though HEL rates are much lower than credit cards.

StepWhat It CalculatesWhy It Matters
1. Current debt cost Estimates total interest if each debt is paid with minimum payments only Sets the baseline to beat
2. HEL cost Calculates fixed monthly payment and total interest for the consolidation loan Your actual new obligation
3. Interest savings Old total interest − New total interest The true financial gain (or loss)
4. Monthly payment delta Sum of old minimums − New fixed HEL payment Cash flow impact each month
🚨 Critical trap: Consolidating a 5-year credit card debt into a 20-year HEL may lower your monthly payment but can cost more in total interest because the HEL extends the repayment period dramatically. The calculator will warn you if consolidation costs more overall and suggest a shorter term.
✅ Minimum Requirements

Most US lenders require a minimum 620 credit score (many prefer 680+), at least 15–20% existing equity in the home, a debt-to-income ratio (DTI) below 43% (including the new payment), and a stable, documentable income history of at least two years. Some lenders go to 50% DTI for strong borrowers.

💸 Typical Closing Costs

Home equity loans typically cost between $1,000 and $3,500 in closing fees — far less than a full refinance (which can run 2%–6% of the loan). Common charges include an appraisal fee ($300–$600), title search, origination fee (0–1%), recording fees, and attorney/settlement fee. Some lenders offer no-closing-cost HELs in exchange for a slightly higher rate.

⏱️ How Long Does It Take?

A home equity loan typically closes in 2 to 6 weeks from application. You will need a home appraisal (which can now often be done as a desktop or drive-by), income verification (W-2s, tax returns, pay stubs), and a title search. After closing, federal law gives you a 3-business-day right of rescission — you can cancel for any reason within that window.

🇺🇸 5 Real US Examples
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Real US Loan Scenarios: Debt Consolidation & Home Improvement (2026)

Each scenario below uses actual US median home prices, realistic 2026 HEL rates, and the same calculation engine powering this tool. Plug any of these inputs into the calculator above to verify every number yourself.

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Example 1 · Home Improvement · Phoenix, AZ
Marcus & Diane T. — Kitchen + Master Bath Remodel
Suburban homeowners · Bought 2018 · Credit score 730
📋 The Situation
Marcus and Diane purchased their Phoenix home in 2018 for $340,000. Thanks to Arizona’s strong appreciation, it is now worth $490,000. They owe $241,000 remaining on their mortgage and want to do a full kitchen gut-remodel and master bathroom expansion — contractor quotes came in at $65,000. Because this is a defined, one-time project with a firm budget, a Home Equity Loan beats a HELOC — the fixed rate locks in predictable monthly payments for the entire construction period and beyond. Their CLTV after borrowing would be 62.4% — well inside the green zone for excellent rate pricing.
Home Value: $490,000
Mortgage Balance: $241,000
Loan Amount: $65,000
Rate: 7.25%
Term: 10 years
CLTV: 62.4%
Purpose: Home Improvement ✅ Deductible
💡 Key takeaway: Interest is IRS-deductible (TCJA 2017) because funds go toward substantially improving the secured home. At 62% CLTV, Marcus and Diane qualify for the lender’s best-tier rate. The $760/month payment is easily offset by the estimated $40,000–$55,000 increase in resale value that a full kitchen + bath remodel typically delivers in the Phoenix metro market.
Monthly Payment
$760
Total Interest
$26,234
Total Cost
$91,234
CLTV
62.4% ✅
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Example 2 · Debt Consolidation · Atlanta, GA
Keisha M. — Wiping Out $48K in High-Rate Debt
Single homeowner · Bought 2020 · Credit score 695
📋 The Situation
Keisha’s Atlanta home is worth $385,000 and she owes $290,000 on her mortgage. She has accumulated $48,000 across three credit cards (average 22.5% APR) and a personal loan (14.9% APR). Her minimum payments total $1,340/month and at this pace she projects over $38,000 in future interest. A 10-year Home Equity Loan at 8.25% replaces all of it with a single $590/month fixed payment and saves her $26,800 in total interest — while freeing up $750/month in immediate cash flow. Her post-HEL CLTV is 87.5% — Keisha qualifies comfortably at her 695 credit score tier.
Home Value: $385,000
Mortgage Balance: $290,000
Loan Amount: $48,000
Rate: 8.25%
Term: 10 years
CLTV: 87.5%
Purpose: Debt Consolidation ❌ Not deductible
⚠️ Key takeaway: Debt consolidation interest is NOT tax-deductible under TCJA 2017. More importantly — Keisha must commit to not re-running credit cards after they are cleared. If she does, she will end up with the HEL payment AND new card balances, doubling her problem. Use the Consolidation tab to verify the full math and confirm the term is not so long it erases the savings.
Monthly Payment
$590
Interest Saved
$26,800
Monthly Cash Flow +
+$750/mo
CLTV
87.5% ✅
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Example 3 · Emergency / Medical · Columbus, OH
Robert & Sandra P. — Paying Down $55K in Medical Debt
Retired homeowners · Owned 22 years · Credit score 710
📋 The Situation
Robert and Sandra own their Columbus home outright — no mortgage — with a current value of $310,000. After an unexpected medical event, they carry $55,000 in hospital and specialist bills at various interest rates between 0% (deferred) and 24.99%. Rather than drain retirement savings, they take a $55,000 Home Equity Loan against their fully paid home. With zero existing mortgage, their CLTV is just 17.7% — the absolute best tier. Even at a modest credit score of 710, they are offered 7.50%. The 15-year term keeps payments affordable on a fixed retirement income.
Home Value: $310,000
Mortgage Balance: $0
Loan Amount: $55,000
Rate: 7.50%
Term: 15 years
CLTV: 17.7% ✅✅
Purpose: Medical / Personal ❌ Not deductible
💡 Key takeaway: Owning your home free and clear is one of the most powerful financial assets you can hold. It lets you access large amounts of low-rate capital in emergencies without liquidating investments — which could trigger capital gains taxes or retirement penalties. The 17.7% CLTV puts Robert and Sandra in the best-possible pricing tier with virtually every US lender.
Monthly Payment
$509
Total Interest
$36,605
Total Cost
$91,605
CLTV
17.7% 🟢
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Example 4 · ADU / Rental Income · Austin, TX
Derek L. — Building a Backyard ADU to Generate Rent
Investor-homeowner · Bought 2019 · Credit score 755
📋 The Situation
Derek’s Austin home is worth $620,000 and he owes $355,000. He wants to build an Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) in his backyard for $90,000 — an increasingly popular move in Austin where ADU rental income averages $1,800–$2,400/month. A Home Equity Loan at 7.75% for 15 years finances the entire build. The ADU adds an estimated $130,000–$160,000 to Derek’s home value while the rental income covers the HEL payment with cash flow left over. CLTV after the loan is 72.6% — well within the 740+ credit score tier.
Home Value: $620,000
Mortgage Balance: $355,000
Loan Amount: $90,000
Rate: 7.75%
Term: 15 years
CLTV: 72.6%
Purpose: Home Improvement ✅ Deductible
💡 Key takeaway: This is one of the strongest HEL use cases — building something that both increases property value AND generates rental income. Derek’s $843/month HEL payment is covered by a fraction of his expected $1,800+ ADU rent. Over 15 years the ADU effectively pays for itself while Derek keeps full appreciation on the entire property. The interest is tax-deductible since it is used to substantially improve the secured home.
Monthly Payment
$843
Est. Monthly Rent
$1,800+
Value Added
$130K–$160K
CLTV
72.6% ✅
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Example 5 · Pre-Sale Renovations · Denver, CO
Angela & Tom W. — Renovate Now, Sell for More in 18 Months
Empty-nesters · Owned 14 years · Credit score 748
📋 The Situation
Angela and Tom plan to sell their Denver home in 18 months and downsize. Their home is worth $570,000 with only $82,000 left on the mortgage. A real estate agent advises that $45,000 in targeted updates — flooring, paint, updated fixtures, landscaping — could push their sale price from $570K to $635,000+, a $65,000 uplift on a $45,000 investment. Rather than touch their savings, they take a 5-year HEL at 7.60%. The short term means a higher monthly payment ($901) but they will pay the loan off completely at closing — total interest for 18 months is only about $5,100.
Home Value: $570,000
Mortgage Balance: $82,000
Loan Amount: $45,000
Rate: 7.60%
Term: 5 years
CLTV: 22.3%
Purpose: Home Improvement ✅ Deductible
💡 Key takeaway: When you plan to sell within 2–3 years, pick the shortest term available (typically 5 years) to minimize interest and close the loan cleanly at the sale. Check the amortization schedule to see your exact payoff balance at month 18 — that is the figure you will bring to closing. Angela and Tom pay roughly $5,100 in interest total to unlock a potential $65,000+ sale price gain — one of the best ROIs in residential real estate.
Monthly Payment
$901
18-mo Interest Only
~$5,100
Est. Sale Price Gain
$65,000+
CLTV
22.3% 🟢
🎯 5 Expert Pro Tips
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Expert Underwriting Tips: Maximizing CLTV & Comparing HELOCs

These tips come straight from how underwriters and loan officers actually look at your file. Use them with the calculator to stress-test your numbers before you ever talk to a lender.

1Maximize your CLTV “sweet spot”
Stay at or below 80% CLTV whenever you can
Lenders price home equity loans in CLTV tiers — the lower your combined loan-to-value, the better your odds of approval and the more aggressive the rate offers you will see. Before you apply, drag the numbers in this calculator until your requested loan keeps your CLTV at or below 80% if possible, and below 85% at most.
  • Try reducing your loan amount until CLTV falls into the green zone.
  • If you are above 85%, consider paying your mortgage down a bit longer first.
  • Screenshot the CLTV bar and numbers — they are exactly what a loan officer will key into their system.
Pro move: Run one scenario at your ideal loan amount and one at a smaller amount that keeps CLTV ≤ 80%. You will often see a noticeably lower rate and fees at the lower CLTV tier.
2Shorter terms save far more than you think
Compare 10-, 15- and 20-year options side-by-side
Most people default to a longer term to “keep the payment comfortable,” but this can quietly add tens of thousands in extra interest. Use the calculator to model the same loan amount at 10, 15 and 20 years. Watching how total interest drops as term shrinks is often the nudge you need to choose a smarter term.
  • Lock monthly payment from the results card, then shorten the term and see the new payment.
  • If the 10-year payment is too high, 15 years is often a sweet compromise.
  • Remember: you can always pay a 20-year loan like a 10-year one — but not the other way around.
Rule of thumb: if you are consolidating high-interest debt, aim for the shortest term you can comfortably afford so you do not turn 5 years of debt into 20 years of payments.
3Use HEL only for “good” debt
Match your loan purpose to IRS rules and long-term value
Turning short-term consumption into long-term mortgage-style debt is how people get trapped. Reserve home equity loans primarily for projects that increase your home’s value or improve your long-term finances — not for vacations, gadgets, or everyday spending.
  • Choose “Home improvement” in the calculator’s purpose buttons when you are upgrading the property.
  • Debt consolidation can be smart if the term is reasonable and you commit not to re-run credit card balances.
  • Avoid using HELs for depreciating assets that you could finance with shorter, unsecured loans instead.
If the calculator shows that consolidation saves interest but stretches your payoff way out, consider a smaller loan amount or shorter term so you still exit debt on a healthy timeline.
4Rate-shop like an underwriter
Get at least 3 quotes and plug them into the tool
Lenders price HELs differently based on credit score, CLTV, loan size, and occupancy. A 0.25%–0.75% rate spread between lenders is common — and that difference compounds over 10–20 years. After using this calculator to dial in your ideal loan amount and term, collect written quotes from at least three lenders and plug each rate and fee set into the tool.
  • Use the closing cost box to compare true APRs, not just headline rates.
  • Watch how total interest and breakeven time change lender by lender.
  • Include a local credit union in your mix — they often price aggressively on HELs.
You are not just shopping for the lowest rate — you are shopping for the best total cost given your time horizon and how long you plan to keep the property.
5Plan your exit before you borrow
Know exactly how and when you will pay it off
Before you sign, decide what “success” looks like for this loan. Are you using a HEL as a bridge to a future refinance? As a way to fund renovations before selling in 5–7 years? Or as a long-term wealth tool to improve the property you plan to keep for decades? Your exit plan should shape the term, amount, and structure you choose.
  • If you plan to sell or refi soon, shorter terms or interest-only HELOCs might be better.
  • If this is a long-term “forever home,” consider slightly higher payments in exchange for a faster payoff.
  • Use the amortization schedule to see your balance at the exact year you expect to sell or refinance.
A simple written plan — why you are borrowing, for how long, and how you will repay — will keep your decisions aligned with your future self instead of your current impulses.
❓ Home Equity Loan FAQ

Home Equity Loan (HEL) & Second Mortgage Frequently Asked Questions

Clear, plain-English answers about HEL vs HELOC, CLTV, closing costs, tax rules, debt consolidation, risk, and how to use this calculator to model your own scenario before you apply.

1
What is a home equity loan and how is it different from a HELOC?
A Home Equity Loan (HEL) is a second mortgage that gives you one lump sum at a fixed interest rate, repaid over a set term (5–30 years). A HELOC (Home Equity Line of Credit) is revolving credit you can draw from and repay repeatedly, usually at a variable rate tied to Prime. If you know the exact amount you need and want a predictable payment, a HEL is usually better. If your costs are spread out and uncertain, a HELOC may be more flexible.
2
How do lenders decide how much I can borrow with a home equity loan?
Lenders look at your Combined Loan-to-Value (CLTV), which is your existing mortgage plus the new HEL divided by your home’s value. Most US lenders cap CLTV between 80% and 90%, depending on credit score and property type. This calculator uses your home value, mortgage balance, and requested loan amount to compute CLTV instantly so you can see whether you are likely inside typical lender limits before you apply.
3
What credit score do I need for a home equity loan?
Many lenders set a minimum FICO around 620–640, but you will usually need 680+ for the best rates and higher CLTV limits. Some credit unions and portfolio lenders will consider scores in the low 600s with strong income and low debts, but pricing is higher. Use this calculator to test different CLTV levels — if you can stay at or below 80% CLTV with a 700+ score, you are in a very strong tier at most US banks and credit unions.
4
Are home equity loan interest rates higher than first mortgage rates?
Usually yes. A HEL is a second lien behind your primary mortgage, which makes it slightly riskier for the lender. In 2026, it is common to see HEL rates roughly 0.75%–2.00% higher than top-tier 30-year fixed mortgage rates for the same borrower. Even so, HEL rates are typically far lower than credit cards, personal loans, or buy-now-pay-later offers, which is why they are often used for major projects and debt consolidation.
5
How does this calculator compute my monthly payment?
The tool uses the standard fixed-rate amortization formula that every US lender uses: your loan amount, interest rate, and term determine a single monthly payment that stays the same for the life of the loan. Each payment is split between interest (balance × monthly rate) and principal (the rest). The calculator then builds a full amortization schedule so you can see exactly how much interest and principal you pay in every month and year.
6
Will taking a home equity loan affect my existing mortgage?
A HEL does not change the rate, term, or payment on your current first mortgage. It is a separate loan with its own payment due each month. Your total housing cost becomes: existing mortgage payment + HEL payment + taxes and insurance. The only time your first mortgage changes is with a cash-out refinance, where you replace the current loan entirely with a larger new mortgage.
7
Are home equity loan closing costs high?
Compared to a full refinance, HEL closing costs are usually modest — think $1,000–$3,500 for most borrowers, depending on loan size and state. Common fees include an appraisal, title search, recording fees, and an origination or underwriting fee. This calculator lets you plug those estimated costs into the closing costs field so you can see the effect on APR and breakeven time. Some lenders offer “no-closing-cost” HELs in exchange for a slightly higher rate.
8
Is home equity loan interest tax deductible in 2026?
Under IRS TCJA 2017, home equity interest is only deductible if loan proceeds are used to buy, build, or substantially improve the home that secures the loan, and your total qualified residence debt stays within the current IRS limits (generally $750,000 for joint filers). Using a HEL for debt consolidation, tuition, vehicles, or personal expenses does not qualify. The calculator’s tax section assumes you itemize deductions and use funds in a qualifying way — always confirm details with a tax professional.
9
Is it risky to use a home equity loan for debt consolidation?
It can be both powerful and dangerous. A HEL often cuts your interest rate dramatically and can reduce your total interest paid if you pick a reasonable term. But you are turning unsecured debt (cards, personal loans) into debt secured by your home. If you cannot afford the HEL payment, you risk foreclosure. The bigger trap is behavior: if you consolidate cards and then run them back up, you will have more total debt than when you started. Use the consolidation tab to verify your true savings and commit to a clear payoff plan.
10
How long does it take to get a home equity loan approved and funded?
Most HELs close in about 2–6 weeks. Timelines depend on how quickly you provide documents (income, assets, insurance), how busy the appraiser and title company are, and whether your property has any title complications. After closing, federal law gives you a three-business-day right of rescission on most owner-occupied HELs — during that period you can cancel the loan for any reason, and funds are disbursed only after the rescission window ends.
11
What happens to my home equity loan if I sell my house?
Both your first mortgage and your home equity loan must be paid off in full at closing. The title company will request payoff statements from each lender and pay them directly from the sale proceeds. Any remaining funds after paying off all liens and closing costs go to you. You can use this calculator’s amortization schedule to estimate your HEL payoff balance in the month you expect to sell.
12
Can I refinance or pay off a home equity loan early?
Yes. You can pay extra principal any time to shorten your payoff, and many HELs have no prepayment penalty. Use the amortization schedule to see how even small extra payments per month accelerate payoff. You may also be able to refinance your HEL into a new HEL, HELOC, or cash-out refi if rates drop or your home value rises. Always check your specific note for any early-termination fees before refinancing.
13
What is the difference between CLTV and LTV?
LTV (Loan-to-Value) looks at just one loan compared to the home’s value — often your first mortgage only. CLTV (Combined Loan-to-Value) adds all loans secured by the property: your first mortgage plus any home equity loans or HELOC balances. For new HELs and HELOCs, lenders care most about CLTV, because that shows their total exposure if they had to foreclose and sell your home.
14
Do I need an appraisal to get a home equity loan?
In most cases yes, but it may not always be a full in‑person appraisal. Many lenders now use desktop, drive‑by, or automated valuation models (AVMs) for lower-risk deals, especially when CLTV is well below 80%. The type of valuation affects your cost and timeline. This calculator assumes the value you enter reflects a realistic current market value — ideally supported by recent comps or your lender’s estimate.
15
Will applying for a home equity loan hurt my credit score?
Your lender will typically perform a hard credit inquiry, which can temporarily reduce your score by a few points. Opening a new tradeline can also affect your average account age and credit mix. Over time, if you make on‑time payments and reduce higher‑interest card balances, your overall credit health can improve. Rate‑shopping multiple lenders within a short window is usually treated as a single mortgage inquiry by most scoring models.
16
What are the main risks of taking a home equity loan?
The biggest risk is that your home is collateral. If you cannot make the payments, your lender can eventually foreclose. Other risks include over‑borrowing (raising your CLTV too high), using a HEL for non‑essential spending, or extending short‑term debts over a very long period so you pay more total interest. This calculator helps you see those trade‑offs clearly by showing total interest, payoff timelines, and how different terms impact your monthly payment and risk level.
17
Can I get a home equity loan on a second home or investment property?
Often yes, but guidelines are tighter. Many lenders only offer HELs and HELOCs on primary residences and sometimes second homes. Investment properties may be eligible but usually require lower CLTV caps (for example 70%–75%), higher credit scores, more reserves, and higher rates. Always check lender-specific rules. This calculator still works for non‑owner‑occupied scenarios — just be conservative with CLTV and rate assumptions.
18
Is a cash-out refinance better than a home equity loan?
It depends on your priorities. A cash‑out refi replaces your entire first mortgage and may yield a lower overall rate if current mortgage rates are below your existing rate. But it also resets your mortgage term and comes with higher closing costs. A HEL leaves your current mortgage untouched and only adds a second, smaller payment. Use this tool and a standard mortgage calculator together: model your current mortgage vs a hypothetical refi, then compare those results to a HEL scenario for the same cash amount.
19
How should I choose the term for my home equity loan?
Shorter terms (5–10 years) have higher monthly payments but much lower total interest and faster payoff. Longer terms (15–30 years) keep the payment comfortable but greatly increase interest cost. Start by entering a term that fits your budget, then try shaving 5 years off and see how much interest you save in this calculator. If you are using a HEL for debt consolidation, aim for the shortest term you can truly afford so you do not drag old debt out for decades.
20
Can I use a home equity loan to buy another property?
Many investors do exactly that — they tap equity from their primary residence to fund down payments on rentals or vacation homes. From a tax standpoint, interest may or may not be deductible depending on how the IRS classifies the use of funds and which property secures the loan. From a risk standpoint, you are leveraging your home to buy another asset, which magnifies both gains and losses. Run conservative scenarios in this calculator and consider working with a CPA and financial planner if you are using HELs to build a portfolio.
21
Does this calculator guarantee I will be approved for a home equity loan?
No. This tool is for education and planning only. It cannot see your full credit report, income documentation, assets, or lender overlays. Actual approval, rate, closing costs, and terms depend on a full underwriting review by a licensed lender. Use the calculator to understand how CLTV, term, and rate affect your payment and risk — then request official Loan Estimates from multiple lenders to see real offers.
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Related US Mortgage & Debt Payoff Calculators

Use these tools from USFinanceCalculators.com to stress‑test your budget, compare alternatives, and map out your full debt strategy before you borrow against your home.

Before you apply
Debt-to-Income Ratio Calculator
Check whether your new home equity loan payment keeps your DTI in a range most US lenders are comfortable with before you submit a full application.
Open DTI calculator
Compare options
Debt Consolidation Loan Savings Calculator
Not sure whether to use a HEL or unsecured consolidation loan? Compare interest, term, and monthly payment differences side‑by‑side before you tap your home equity.
Compare consolidation options
Big picture
Debt Freedom Date Forecaster
Model when you will be 100% debt‑free with and without a home equity loan by plugging in your HEL payment and all other obligations.
Forecast your debt‑free date
Alternative to borrowing
Debt Snowball Method Calculator
Run a scenario where you skip the HEL and instead attack smaller balances first using the snowball approach, then compare payoff speed and total interest.
Try snowball payoff plan
Optimize interest
Debt Avalanche Method Calculator
See how quickly you could become debt‑free by targeting highest APR first instead of using home equity at all, or as a complement to your HEL strategy.
Try avalanche payoff plan
Advanced comparison
Loan Comparison Analyzer
Compare your home equity loan against HELOCs, personal loans, or a cash‑out refinance by feeding in the monthly payment and APR from each option.
Analyze multiple loan options
🏛️ Official US Government Resources
For deeper background on home equity loans, HELOCs, and mortgage data, review these official US government resources:
  • CFPB – Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) booklet: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau explainer on risks, disclosures, and comparison shopping for HELOCs and home equity products. Download CFPB HELOC guide ↗
  • CFPB – What you should know about Home Equity Lines of Credit: Standard disclosure booklet lenders must provide before opening a HELOC, including how credit limits, rate changes, and repayment periods work. Read CFPB HELOC Q&A ↗
  • IRS – Tax Reform and Home Equity Interest: IRS guidance on when interest on home equity loans and lines remains deductible under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) when used to buy, build, or substantially improve your home. Visit IRS news and updates ↗
  • FHFA – National Mortgage Database (NMDB): Aggregate public data on US mortgage characteristics, including LTV and DTI trends that influence common lender standards for home equity lending. Explore FHFA mortgage data ↗

📝 Editorial Transparency, IRS Tax Rules & Calculation Methodology

USFinanceCalculators.com is an independent calculator site. Our home equity loan tool is built on:
  • Standard US amortization math for fixed‑rate loans, using the same formulas banks and credit unions rely on.
  • Public guidance from agencies like the IRS, CFPB, and FHFA for CLTV ranges, tax rules, and typical underwriting practices — always simplified into plain English.
  • Market‑typical rate and term ranges that are reviewed periodically, but not tied to any single lender’s pricing.
We do not sell loans, do not collect applications, and do not receive compensation for steering you to specific lenders. Any links to external banks, brokers, or government sites are provided strictly for education.

Calculators on this site are designed to be accurate for typical US scenarios, but they are still estimates. Your actual approval, rate, payment, and tax outcome depend on your lender’s underwriters and your own tax advisor. Always confirm key numbers using official Loan Estimates and professional advice before making major decisions.