The best way to tap home equity, now that the Fed’s cut rates

Key takeaways

  • Home equity loans, HELOCs, and cash-out refinancing are three popular ways to borrow using your home as collateral.

  • A cash-out refinance replaces your existing mortgage while home equity loans and HELOCs involve taking on an additional debt.

  • With all three, the amount you can borrow will depend on the amount of equity (ownership stake) you have in your home.

  • Home equity loans and HELOCs may be quicker to get, but cash-out refis offer lower interest rates.

Back in September 2024, the Federal Reserve finally began to lower interest rates, and continued the cuts at its November and December meetings. HELOC and home equity rates have fallen in response. In fact, borrowing against your home’s value hasn’t been this affordable in about a year.

People are paying attention. Mortgage holders collectively withdrew about $48 billion of their home equity in the third quarter of 2024 —  the largest sum in two years. “With recent interest rate cuts, homeowners may feel tempted to unlock their home’s equity to access capital,” says Tim Choate, founder and CEO of RedAwning.com, a platform for short-term vacation rental owners and property managers.

$207,000

The amount of tappable equity that the average mortgage-holding homeowner currently has

Source: ICE Mortgage Monitor November 2024

Several ways exist to borrow against the accrued value of your home. “Choosing between a home equity loan, HELOC or cash-out refinance isn’t a one-size-fits-all decision,” Choate adds. “Each option has unique characteristics that align with different financial needs, risk profiles, and flexibility requirements.”

Let’s explore those differences — and how to weigh home equity loans and HELOCs vs. cash-out refinances.

Ways to tap your home’s equity

There are three main ways to access your home equity and turn it into cash: home equity lines of credit (HELOCs), home equity loans, and cash-out refinance. All are home-secured debts — that is, they’re backed by an asset (namely, your residence). All can be good sources if you need significant sums: a five-figure amount, at least.

The cash-out refinance is essentially a mortgage with benefits. You’d replace your current mortgage with it. The other two are loans that you could take out in addition to your primary mortgage.

HELOCs: overview

A home equity line of credit (HELOC) is a revolving, open line of credit at your disposal, which functions much like a credit card — you can use it as needed, repaying and then borrowing again. However, a HELOC has some benefits over credit cards.

“Typically, the available balance you can spend on a HELOC is higher than a credit card, and the interest rates are lower than credit cards,” says Michael Foguth, president and founder of the Howell, Michigan-based Foguth Financial Group, “But a HELOC still has to go through underwriting like a typical mortgage because you’re using equity in [your] home to back up the loan.”