How a HELOC Works

HELOC explained, in plain English

How a HELOC works: a plain-English guide

A HELOC is a line of credit secured by your home that works like a credit card with a borrowing limit, except the limit is set by your home equity and the interest rate is much lower because the loan is backed by your house.

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Lender Express Mortgage LLC · NMLS #1963444 · Equal Housing Opportunity

The mental model

What a HELOC actually is

A HELOC stands for home equity line of credit. It is a second loan on your home that gives you access to a pool of money. You can pull from that pool, pay it back, and pull again during a set window of time.

Think of it like a credit card with a much bigger limit and a much lower rate. The limit is based on your home equity. The rate is lower because the loan is backed by the house itself.

A HELOC is not the same as a home equity loan. A home equity loan is one lump sum at closing with fixed payments. A HELOC is a flexible line you can draw from over time. Both are second mortgages, but they work very differently.

A HELOC is also not a refinance. Your first mortgage stays in place. The HELOC sits behind it in second position. If your first mortgage has a low rate, you keep it. See how that compares with a cash-out refinance.

The math

How your equity becomes a credit limit

Your line size is set by your home value, your first mortgage balance, and a lender cap called CLTV. CLTV stands for combined loan-to-value, which is total mortgage debt divided by home value. For definitions of other technical terms used on this page, see the HELOC glossary.

On a primary residence, the cap is 85 percent CLTV. On an investment property, the cap is 70 percent.

Worked example.
Home value: $500,000
First mortgage balance: $200,000
85 percent of $500,000 is $425,000 total allowed mortgage debt.
Subtract the $200,000 first mortgage and you have up to $225,000 of available HELOC line.

That available line is the maximum. Your actual approved amount also depends on credit, income, and other underwriting factors. See the full qualification rules.

Want to model your own numbers? Run them through the HELOC calculator for a quick estimate of your line.

The two phases

The draw period and the repayment period

A HELOC has two phases. The draw period comes first. The repayment period comes second.

Draw period

During the draw period, you can pull money from the line. You make interest-only payments on the balance you have drawn. As you pay the balance back down, that credit becomes available again.

Repayment period

When the draw period ends, the line enters repayment. You can no longer draw new funds. Your monthly payment recalculates to pay off the remaining balance over the rest of the term.

Term options

Choose your total term at application. Each option has a fixed draw period followed by a fixed repayment period. The four terms below are common examples. Different HELOC products may offer different draw and repayment combinations.

10-year term
3 yr draw 7 yr repayment
15-year term
3 yr draw 12 yr repayment
20-year term
4 yr draw 16 yr repayment
30-year term
5 yr draw 25 yr repayment

Pick the term that matches how long you want flexible access and how long you want to pay the balance back.

Payment mechanics

How HELOC payments are calculated

Your payment is based on your balance, not your line size. If your approved line is $100,000 but you only drew $20,000, you pay on $20,000.

During the draw period, payments are typically interest-only. If you draw more, the payment goes up. If you pay the balance down, the payment goes down.

When repayment starts, the payment recalculates. It now includes both principal and interest, sized to pay off the balance by the end of the term.

Want to see your payment at different draw amounts? Run the numbers first. For the full fee picture, see HELOC rates, fees, and closing costs.

See your real HELOC rate in minutes.

A soft credit check returns your actual rate. No commitment to proceed.

No impact on your credit score to find out.

Rate mechanics

How interest works on a HELOC

Most HELOCs are variable-rate loans. Your rate is built from two parts: an index and a margin. The index is a published rate that moves with the market. The margin is set by the lender at closing and stays the same for the life of the loan.

When the index moves, your rate moves with it. When the index holds steady, your rate holds steady. The margin never changes.

For the full breakdown of how your rate is built, the indexes used, and current pricing, see the HELOC rates page.

Use of funds

What you can use a HELOC for

A HELOC is general-purpose. Most lenders place few restrictions on how you spend the funds. Common uses we see at Lender Express:

Some uses are restricted in specific states or by specific lenders. Your loan officer flags any restrictions before you commit.

The alternatives

HELOC vs other ways to access equity

Three products give you cash from your home equity. Each works differently. Each fits a different situation.

HELOC

Line of credit

Draw, repay, redraw during the draw period. Variable rate typically. First mortgage stays in place. Funds in about a week. Best for spread-out or uncertain costs.

Home equity loan

Lump sum at closing

Single fixed-rate loan with fixed payments. First mortgage stays in place. Funds in 2 to 4 weeks. Best for a known one-time cost.

Cash-out refi

New first mortgage

Replaces your first mortgage with a new, larger loan at today’s rate. Fixed rate typically. 30+ days to fund. Best only when your current first rate is high.

For the full side-by-side, see HELOC vs cash-out refinance or HELOC vs home equity loan. If you already have a low first mortgage rate you want to protect, see how to access equity without giving up your low rate.

The honest version

What can go wrong with a HELOC

A HELOC is a useful tool. It is also a loan secured by your home. Three risks to know before you sign.

Variable rate exposure

Most HELOCs are variable rate. If the index rises, your rate rises with it. The payment goes up. Build a cushion for that in your budget.

Payment shock at end of draw

During the draw period, payments are typically interest-only. When the line enters repayment, the payment recalculates to include principal. That can be a meaningful jump. Know what your repayment-period payment will look like before you draw a large balance.

Foreclosure risk

The HELOC is secured by your home. If you stop making payments, the lender can foreclose. Treat the HELOC like any other mortgage: pay it on time, every time.

For the full risk disclosure, see HELOC risks and disclosures.

Next step

How to get one

The digital HELOC application takes about 10 to 15 minutes. A soft credit check returns a real rate offer. There is no impact on your credit score from the soft pull.

If you like the offer, you complete the rest of the application online. Most files fund within a week of approval.

For the full step-by-step, see how to apply for a HELOC. Or check your rate now.

Find My HELOC Rate
Common questions

Questions about how a HELOC works

Is a HELOC the same as a home equity loan?

No. A home equity loan is a one-time lump sum with fixed payments. A HELOC is a line of credit you can draw from, pay down, and draw again during the draw period. The home equity loan is better for a known, fixed expense. The HELOC is better for expenses that spread out over time.

What is the maximum I can borrow with a HELOC?

The maximum is set by your equity and the lender’s combined loan-to-value cap. Primary residences typically cap at 85 percent CLTV. So if your home is worth $500,000 and you owe $200,000, your available equity is up to $225,000 at 85 percent CLTV.

Do I have to take all the money at closing?

On the digital HELOC, the full approved amount is drawn at closing. After closing, you can redraw funds as you pay down the balance during the draw period. That is different from older traditional HELOCs that worked entirely on a draw-as-needed basis.

What happens at the end of the draw period?

The HELOC enters the repayment period. You can no longer draw new funds. Your monthly payment recalculates to pay off any remaining balance over the repayment period, which runs 7 to 25 years depending on the term you selected.

Can my HELOC rate change?

Yes, most HELOCs are variable-rate products. Your rate moves with a published index, typically the prime rate. The lender’s margin stays the same. Your loan documents disclose how often the rate can change and any rate caps that apply.

What if my home value drops after I open a HELOC?

The lender has the right to freeze or reduce your available credit if the property value drops significantly. The terms of when that can happen are disclosed in your loan agreement. Drawn funds you have already taken do not go away, but new draws may be limited.

Can I pay off a HELOC early?

Yes, there is no prepayment penalty. If you pay off more than 90 percent of your original draw before a certain point, an early payoff (EPO) fee may apply. Your loan documents disclose the exact terms.

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