HELOC Estimator:
Maximum Credit Line Formula, Draw vs Repayment Period Payments, and HELOC vs Home Equity Loan
A Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) turns accumulated home equity into a revolving credit line — flexible, interest-only during the 10-year draw period, and variable-rate in a way that makes payment planning more complex than a standard mortgage. The CLTV formula determines your maximum available line; the interest-only payment formula shows the low draw-period cost; and the amortization formula reveals the payment shock when the 20-year repayment period begins and interest-only converts to full P&I. Understanding all three before opening a HELOC is the difference between a powerful financial tool and an unwelcome payment surprise.
A Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) is a revolving credit facility secured by the borrower’s home equity. Unlike a home equity loan (which delivers a lump sum at a fixed rate), a HELOC provides a maximum credit line that can be drawn in any amount, repaid, and drawn again during the draw period — functioning like a high-limit credit card backed by real estate collateral. The interest rate is variable, typically set at the Prime Rate plus a margin of 0 to 2 percentage points, and fluctuates with Federal Reserve rate decisions throughout the life of the line.
The HELOC lifecycle has two distinct phases with fundamentally different payment structures. During the draw period (typically 10 years), the borrower pays only interest on the outstanding balance — producing a low monthly cost that varies with both the drawn amount and the current interest rate. At the end of the draw period, the line closes to new draws and the outstanding balance enters the repayment period (typically 20 years), where it is amortized as a fully-amortizing loan. The shift from interest-only to principal-and-interest produces the HELOC’s defining risk: payment shock. On $80,000 outstanding at 9%, the payment jumps from $600/month (interest-only) to $720/month (20-year P&I) at repayment start — a 20% increase with no action by the borrower.
Three HELOC Formulas: Max Line, Draw Period Payment, Repayment Payment
Three formulas govern HELOC math from credit line sizing through end-of-draw-period shock. Each addresses a different decision point: how much can I borrow, what will I pay during the draw period, and what will I pay when repayment starts?
1. MAXIMUM HELOC CREDIT LINE (CLTV FORMULA)
2. DRAW PERIOD PAYMENT (INTEREST-ONLY)
3. REPAYMENT PERIOD PAYMENT (P&I AMORTIZATION)
The repayment period formula uses the standard amortization formula with the remaining HELOC balance as the principal, the current HELOC rate as the rate, and the repayment term (20 years = 240 months) as the period count. One important nuance: HELOC rates are variable throughout the repayment period, not just the draw period. The repayment payment calculated at origination may therefore differ materially from the actual repayment payment when the 10-year draw period ends — if Prime Rate has risen by 2% during the draw period, both the draw-period interest payments and the eventual repayment amortization will be on a higher rate than initially estimated.
Four HELOC Scenarios: Draw Period, Repayment Shock, vs HE Loan, vs Cash-Out Refi
The four cards below model the key HELOC decision scenarios: the draw-period economics for a typical $100,000 HELOC, the payment shock at repayment start, a direct HELOC vs home equity loan comparison, and the HELOC vs cash-out refinance decision framework for homeowners with below-market first mortgage rates.
The fourth card illustrates the defining HELOC use case in the current rate environment: homeowners with sub-4% first mortgages locked in 2020-2021 who need liquidity should almost universally prefer a HELOC over a cash-out refinance. Resetting a $280,000 balance from 3.25% to 6.80% adds approximately $900/month in additional first mortgage interest cost — vastly exceeding the $708/month interest cost of a $100,000 HELOC. The HELOC captures the needed capital at 8.50% on $100,000 (the new money only) while preserving the 3.25% rate on the existing $280,000 balance. This “rate preservation” value of HELOCs over cash-out refinancing is the primary reason HELOC originations have increased significantly since 2022 when mortgage rates rose above first mortgage rates for the first time in a decade.
Calculate Your Maximum HELOC and Draw vs Repayment Period Payments
Enter your home value, first mortgage balance, desired CLTV, HELOC rate, draw amount, and expected balance at repayment start to calculate max credit line, monthly interest-only payment, repayment P&I payment, and payment shock at draw period end.
Open the HELOC EstimatorComplete HELOC Calculation: $500,000 Home, $280,000 Mortgage, $100,000 Drawn
The data block below builds the complete HELOC analysis for a homeowner with a $500,000 appraised home, $280,000 first mortgage balance, and plans to draw $100,000 from a HELOC at the current 8.50% variable rate. It shows the maximum credit line, draw period interest-only cost, and the repayment period P&I payment with the exact payment shock amount.
The data block’s final line — $160/month payment shock on a $100,000 balance — is significant but manageable for most borrowers. The shock becomes severe when the outstanding balance is large or when the rate has risen significantly during the draw period. A borrower who drew $145,000 (the full credit line) at 8.50% and sees Prime Rate rise 1.5% before repayment starts would face: draw-period interest at 10.00% = $1,208/month versus original $708/month, and repayment P&I at 10.00% = $1,399/month — a total swing of $691/month from the original estimate. This rate sensitivity is HELOC’s fundamental risk and the reason why fixed-rate home equity loans are preferable for borrowers on fixed incomes or without significant financial margin.
Maximum HELOC Credit Line at Different Home Values and Mortgage Balances
The table below shows the maximum HELOC credit line at 85% CLTV across a matrix of home values and first mortgage balances. Finding your home value column and current mortgage balance row gives the maximum credit line before lender credit and income review.
| First Mortgage Balance | $300K Home | $400K Home | $500K Home | $650K Home | $800K Home |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $100,000 | $155,000 | $240,000 | $325,000 | $452,500 | $580,000 |
| $150,000 | $105,000 | $190,000 | $275,000 | $402,500 | $530,000 |
| $200,000 | $55,000 | $140,000 | $225,000 | $352,500 | $480,000 |
| $250,000 | $5,000 | $90,000 | $175,000 | $302,500 | $430,000 |
| $300,000 | Not eligible | $40,000 | $125,000 | $252,500 | $380,000 |
| $350,000 | Not eligible | Not eligible | $75,000 | $202,500 | $330,000 |
| $400,000 | Not eligible | Not eligible | $25,000 | $152,500 | $280,000 |
| Maximum HELOC = (Home Value x 85%) – First Mortgage Balance. “Not eligible” means the first mortgage balance alone exceeds 85% of home value — no HELOC capacity exists at this CLTV limit. Some lenders offer 80% max CLTV (more conservative) or 90% max CLTV (more aggressive). At 80% CLTV: max = (Home Value x 80%) – First Mortgage. At 90% CLTV: max = (Home Value x 90%) – First Mortgage. HELOC minimums are typically $10,000-$25,000; lines below this threshold are generally not available. Home value must be supported by a current appraisal for the full line to be approved. | |||||
The “Not eligible” cells in the table reveal an important reality: homeowners who purchased with minimal down payment and have not built significant equity through appreciation or paydown may not qualify for any HELOC. A homeowner who bought a $300,000 home with 10% down ($270,000 mortgage) and the home has not appreciated has a CLTV of $270,000/$300,000 = 90% — above the 85% CLTV limit. As home prices have risen significantly in many US markets since 2020, most homeowners who purchased then have substantial equity even with minimal paydown. But in flat-appreciation markets or for recent high-LTV buyers, HELOC access may be limited or unavailable until appreciation or paydown reduces the CLTV below 85%.
Draw Period vs Repayment Period: Payment Shock at Different Balances
| HELOC Balance at Repayment Start | Draw Period Payment (Interest-Only) | Repayment P&I (8.50%, 20yr) | Payment Shock ($) | Payment Shock (%) | Repayment P&I if Rate Rose to 10.50% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $25,000 | $177 | $217 | +$40 | +22.6% | $249 |
| $50,000 | $354 | $434 | +$80 | +22.6% | $498 |
| $80,000 | $567 | $694 | +$127 | +22.4% | $797 |
| $100,000 | $708 | $868 | +$160 | +22.6% | $996 |
| $145,000 | $1,027 | $1,258 | +$231 | +22.5% | $1,444 |
| $200,000 | $1,417 | $1,736 | +$319 | +22.5% | $1,991 |
| Draw period interest-only payment = Balance x 8.50% / 12. Repayment P&I at 8.50% for 20 years uses standard amortization formula. The 22.5-22.6% payment shock percentage is consistent across all balance levels at any given rate because it reflects the mathematical difference between interest-only and 20-year amortizing payments at 8.50%. At 10.50% rate: repayment payment = Balance x [0.00875 x (1.00875)^240 / ((1.00875)^240 – 1)]. Repayment period rate may differ from draw period rate if variable rate has changed during the 10-year draw period — budget for the potential rate increase, not just the current rate. | |||||
The payment shock percentage of approximately 22.5% is remarkably consistent across all balance sizes at any given interest rate. This consistency means that the shock scales linearly with the outstanding balance: a borrower with $200,000 outstanding will experience exactly twice the dollar shock ($319/month) as one with $100,000 outstanding ($160/month). The most dangerous HELOC scenario is a homeowner who: draws the full line ($145,000) during the draw period, pays only interest for 10 years (accumulating no principal reduction), and then faces the full $1,258/month repayment payment — plus the additional rate risk if Prime has risen during the draw period. This is why HELOC counseling consistently recommends voluntarily paying down principal during the draw period, even though it is not required.
Monthly Interest Cost by Drawn Amount at Different HELOC Rates
The growth bars below show the monthly interest-only payment on the same HELOC at four different drawn amounts at three representative rate levels: 7.50% (Prime Rate flat), 8.50% (Prime + 1%), and 9.50% (Prime + 2%). The bars show how strongly both the drawn amount and the variable rate drive the monthly cost.
The growth bars confirm the interest-only payment’s direct proportionality to the drawn amount: drawing $145,000 costs 5.8 times what drawing $25,000 costs. This proportionality is the core benefit of HELOCs versus home equity loans: if you open a $145,000 HELOC but initially draw only $25,000, you pay interest only on the $25,000 ($177/month), not the full $145,000 ($1,027/month). This draw-only-what-you-need flexibility is especially valuable for home renovation projects where expenses occur in stages — the homeowner can draw funds incrementally, pay interest only on the outstanding amount, and repay between renovation phases to minimize total interest cost.
HELOC vs Home Equity Loan vs Cash-Out Refinance: Full Comparison
HELOC vs Home Equity Loan vs Cash-Out Refi: When to Use Each
HELOC (Home Equity Line of Credit): Best for home renovations with staged or uncertain costs, emergency backup credit, short-term borrowing needs, or when existing first mortgage rate is well below current market. Advantages: low or no closing costs, interest-only draw period, revolving flexibility, pay only on what you draw. Disadvantages: variable rate adds uncertainty, payment shock at repayment start, temptation to over-draw over 10-year period. Home Equity Loan: Best for single known-amount needs (debt consolidation, one-time expense) where rate certainty is valued. Advantages: fixed rate, predictable payment, immediate principal paydown. Disadvantages: higher closing costs ($1,000-$3,000), higher rate than HELOC at origination, full balance accrues interest from day one. Cash-Out Refinance: Best when the existing first mortgage rate is near current market rates AND the borrower wants a single fixed-rate loan covering all debt. Advantages: lower rate than HELOC or HE Loan, single monthly payment, 30-year amortization option. Disadvantages: significant closing costs ($7,000-$12,000 on large loans), resets first mortgage to current market rate (devastating if the existing rate is below market), requires full requalification.
HELOC Tax Deductibility: The Post-TCJA Rules
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 fundamentally changed HELOC interest deductibility. Under current law, HELOC interest is only deductible when the loan proceeds are used to “buy, build, or substantially improve” the home that secures the HELOC. Non-home-related uses — debt consolidation, medical bills, education, vehicles, vacations — no longer qualify for the deduction regardless of loan type.
When HELOC Interest Is and Is Not Deductible (Post-2017 Rules)
DEDUCTIBLE: HELOC used for a kitchen renovation, bathroom addition, roof replacement, window replacement, HVAC upgrade, addition of a bedroom, or any other capital improvement to the secured property. The deduction applies to the interest on the portion of the combined mortgage debt (first mortgage + HELOC) up to $750,000 used for acquisition or improvement purposes. EXAMPLE: $320,000 first mortgage + $80,000 HELOC used for a home addition = $400,000 total, all deductible (under $750,000 combined limit). NOT DEDUCTIBLE: HELOC used to pay off credit cards, buy a car, fund a vacation, pay tuition, start a business, or make any purchase unrelated to the secured property. Even if the HELOC is secured by the home, interest on non-home-purpose draws is not deductible. DOCUMENTATION: Maintain receipts and records demonstrating that HELOC proceeds were used for home improvement if you plan to deduct interest. The IRS may require documentation in an audit. For partial home-improvement use, only the proportional interest on the home-improvement portion is deductible. Consult a tax professional for your specific situation.
HELOC Planning Checklist
Frequently Asked Questions: HELOC Estimator
How is a HELOC payment calculated during the draw period?+
Draw period payment = Outstanding Balance x (Annual HELOC Rate / 12). Interest-only, no principal required. $80,000 drawn at 9.00%: $80,000 x (0.09/12) = $80,000 x 0.0075 = $600/month. If you draw more, the payment rises. If you repay principal voluntarily, the payment falls. If the Prime Rate changes, the HELOC rate and monthly payment change on the next billing cycle. The draw period typically lasts 10 years. During this time, you can draw, repay, and redraw up to the credit line maximum. No principal payment is required, but making voluntary principal payments reduces the outstanding balance and thus the monthly interest cost.
How do I calculate my maximum HELOC amount?+
Max HELOC = (Home Value x Max CLTV%) – First Mortgage Balance. Most lenders use 85% CLTV maximum. Example: $500,000 home, $280,000 first mortgage, 85% CLTV: ($500,000 x 0.85) – $280,000 = $425,000 – $280,000 = $145,000 max HELOC. At 80% CLTV: ($500,000 x 0.80) – $280,000 = $120,000. At 90% CLTV: ($500,000 x 0.90) – $280,000 = $170,000. The home must appraise at or above the assumed value for the full line to be approved. Most lenders require an appraisal (or automated valuation model for smaller lines) to establish the current home value before approving the credit line.
What is HELOC payment shock?+
Payment shock is the increase in monthly payment when the draw period ends and the outstanding balance transitions to full P&I amortization over the repayment period (typically 20 years). Example: $100,000 outstanding at 8.50%. Draw period: $100,000 x 0.0708% = $708/month (interest-only). Repayment period: $100,000 amortized at 8.50% over 20 years = $868/month P&I. Shock = +$160/month (+22.6%). The shock is consistent at approximately 22% of the draw period payment at any given rate because it reflects the shift from interest-only to 20-year amortization. Additional shock occurs if rates rise during the draw period: if HELOC rate has risen from 8.50% to 10.50%, the repayment P&I on $100,000 would be $996/month instead of $868 — a total shock of $288/month vs original draw period payment.
What is the difference between a HELOC and a home equity loan?+
HELOC: revolving credit line, variable rate (Prime + margin), interest-only draw period (10yr), repayment period (20yr), low/no closing costs, pay interest only on amount drawn. Home Equity Loan: fixed-rate lump sum, immediate P&I from month one, fixed term (10-20 years), closing costs $1,000-$3,000. Example ($100,000 at current rates): HELOC at 8.50% draw period: $708/month. HEL at 8.00% fixed 20yr: $836/month. HEL costs more monthly but provides fixed-rate certainty. HELOC is cheaper in the draw period but risks higher payments if rates rise. HELOC better for: renovation projects with uncertain total cost, ongoing access needs, short-term borrowing. HEL better for: known single amount, rate certainty, fixed income situations.
What HELOC rate can I expect in 2025?+
2025 HELOC rates are variable, tied to the Prime Rate (approximately 7.50% in mid-2025 after Fed adjustments). Most HELOCs are priced at Prime + 0 to 2 percentage points: excellent credit (760+), substantial equity (CLTV under 70%): Prime + 0% to 0.5% = 7.50-8.00%. Good credit (700-759), CLTV 70-85%: Prime + 0.5% to 1.5% = 8.00-9.00%. Average credit (660-699), CLTV near 85%: Prime + 1.5% to 2.5% = 9.00-10.00%. HELOC rates change with the Prime Rate every time the Federal Reserve adjusts the federal funds rate. Budget for rate variability throughout the draw period — rates can rise or fall significantly over 10 years.
Is HELOC interest tax deductible?+
Post-2017 TCJA: HELOC interest is deductible ONLY when proceeds are used to buy, build, or substantially improve the home securing the HELOC. Home renovation, addition, kitchen/bath remodel — deductible. Debt consolidation, car purchase, vacation, education — NOT deductible. The deduction applies to combined mortgage debt (first mortgage + HELOC) up to $750,000 used for acquisition or improvement. Standard deduction ($29,200 married, $14,600 single in 2025) must be exceeded by total itemized deductions for any benefit to result. Most middle-income homeowners take the standard deduction and get no practical benefit from mortgage interest deductibility in 2025. Consult a tax professional and maintain home improvement receipts if claiming the deduction.
Should I get a HELOC or cash-out refinance?+
If existing first mortgage rate is below current market rates (e.g., 3.25% vs current 6.80%): HELOC wins. Cash-out refi would reset the $280,000 balance from 3.25% to 6.80% — adding $900/month in first mortgage interest. HELOC at 8.50% on only the new $100,000 costs $708/month in interest and $7,600 less in closing costs. If existing rate is near current market rates: Cash-out refi may win. First mortgage rates (6.80%) are 1.5-2.0% below HELOC rates (8.50%), so consolidating into a single first mortgage saves interest on the combined balance if closing costs are recoverable within 3-4 years. Rule of thumb: if your existing first mortgage rate is more than 1.5% below current market, use a HELOC to access equity. If within 1.5%, model the total 5-year cost of each option.
What is the CLTV ratio for a HELOC?+
CLTV = (First Mortgage Balance + HELOC Amount) / Home Value. Most lenders allow max CLTV of 80-90%. Example: $500K home, $280K first mortgage, $145K HELOC: CLTV = ($280K + $145K) / $500K = $425K / $500K = 85%. To calculate max HELOC at a given CLTV: Max HELOC = (Home Value x Max CLTV%) – First Mortgage Balance. At 80% CLTV on $500K home with $280K mortgage: ($500K x 0.80) – $280K = $400K – $280K = $120K max line. At 90%: ($500K x 0.90) – $280K = $450K – $280K = $170K max. Conservative lenders (national banks) typically use 80% max CLTV. Credit unions and regional lenders often allow 85-90%.
Can I pay off my HELOC early?+
Yes. Most HELOCs have no prepayment penalty. During the draw period, any payment above the required interest-only minimum is applied to principal, reducing the balance and future interest costs. Paying $1,000/month on a $100,000 HELOC at 8.50% where the minimum interest payment is $708: the $292 excess goes to principal, reducing the balance to $99,708 next month. Continuing this pattern, the balance falls to approximately $81,000 after 5 years vs $100,000 if paying minimum only. Early closure fee: some lenders charge $500-$1,000 if the entire HELOC line is closed within 2-3 years of origination. After this window, closing the line is free. To minimize payment shock, model the voluntary payment amount needed during the draw period to reach your target repayment-period payment, then set that amount as an automatic monthly payment.
Key Takeaways
A HELOC’s maximum credit line is determined by the CLTV formula: (home value x max CLTV percentage) minus first mortgage balance. At 85% CLTV on a $500,000 home with $280,000 in first mortgage debt, the maximum HELOC is $145,000. The draw period interest-only payment on $100,000 at 8.50% is $708/month. The repayment period P&I payment on the same balance is $868/month — a 22.6% payment shock that is predictable and manageable when modeled in advance but genuinely disruptive when discovered only when repayment begins.
The three most consequential HELOC decisions are: whether a HELOC is more appropriate than a home equity loan (fixed rate certainty versus flexibility — choose HELOC for staged renovation projects, HEL for known single amounts), whether a HELOC is more appropriate than a cash-out refinance (if the existing first mortgage rate is more than 1.5% below current market rates, HELOC decisively wins by preserving the below-market first mortgage rate), and how aggressively to pay down principal during the draw period to control the repayment payment shock. Making voluntary principal payments during the draw period is the single most effective HELOC risk management strategy for borrowers who do not want to refinance at the end of the draw period.
Calculate Your HELOC Maximum Line, Draw Period Cost, and Repayment Shock
Our HELOC Estimator computes your maximum credit line using the CLTV formula, monthly interest-only draw period payment, P&I repayment period payment, payment shock amount, and break-even comparison versus a fixed-rate home equity loan.
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