Welcome to Money Monday with Suze, a weekly newsletter designed to inspire your financial life and give you actionable insights from the World’s Personal Finance Expert. Like what you’re reading? Subscribe and share with your friends. Let’s dive in…
The sharp rise in home values over the past few years has been a boon for homeowners. And as home equity values have increased, so too has the demand to take out home equity lines of credit (HELOC).
As a general rule, lenders allow qualified homeowners to take out a HELOC, or home equity loan, as long as they have at least 20% equity. A recent analysis by Black Knight estimates there is now $11.5 trillion—yes trillion—in tappable home equity.
TransUnion reports that the number of HELOC accounts grew 40% last year. I expect that trend is continuing this year, as rising mortgage rates make it less advantageous to do a cash-out refinance.
If you are considering tapping some home equity, you better be smart, and smart means careful. Here are the HELOC risks I want you to understand before you take out a HELOC.
- You are putting your home (more) at risk. You know that if you fail to keep up with your mortgage payments, your lender could foreclose on the property. Well, a HELOC works pretty much the same. Your home is the collateral. If you don’t follow the repayment rules you could face the same risk.
- The draw period can be dangerous. The way HELOCs work is that during the initial draw period, you can tap your line of credit whenever you want. The typical draw is 10 years. And if you want, all you need to repay during the draw is the interest owed when you draw on your credit line. That can make it seem like it’s incredibly affordable to borrow from your home equity. But after year 10, you switch into the repayment phase. You can no longer borrow more from your HELOC, and you must repay the outstanding balance of what you have borrowed. The typical repayment phase is 20 years. Not 30, but 20. You better have a plan for paying that back.
- Your home is not a piggy bank for wants. Given your home is at risk, I don’t want you opening a home equity line of credit and then using it for non-essential spending such as vacations. Nor should it be used to buy a car. And I really don’t like the idea of using home equity to pay for a child’s college, if that means you can’t keep up with saving for retirement because you are repaying the HELOC. The better move is for your child to attend a school that requires less out-of-pocket spending for them, and you. Nor should it be used to overspend on home improvements. A sign you are potentially overspending is if you think you will need many years—not just many months—to pay for a renovation project.
- The interest rate may rise. Many HELOC loans have an adjustable rate, meaning the interest payment can fluctuate based on what is going on with interest rates in general. If you expect to need years to pay back money from a HELOC you might want to consider looking for a fixed-rate HELOC, to protect yourself from the risk of rising interest rates while you are repaying the loan.
- Your line can be cut off at any time. A HELOC should never ever be used as a standby emergency fund. During the financial crisis, many HELOC lenders froze borrowing from a HELOC or reduced the size of the credit line. They did that because the collateral for HELOCs—home values—were falling sharply. Hopefully, we won’t see a replay of what happened to the housing market in the financial crisis, but you never know. Please don’t bank on a HELOC as an emergency fund.
When It Happens… How Will You React?
On Sunday's Suze School episode, I review this past week in the markets and give you guidance for the next year or two and why bonds are coming back in favor. Listen to Sunday's podcast and subscribe to Suze Orman's Women & Money (and everyone smart enough to listen) Podcast on your favorite streaming app.
Earn $100 for you and $100 for a good cause
Now through October 7, you can get rewarded and support those living with cancer, Alzheimer’s or disabilities by opening a High-Rate Checking account at MyAlliant.com/Good.
When you make a $100 minimum opening deposit, qualify for High-Rate Checking by opting into eStatements and having at least one monthly electronic deposit to the Account and maintain a minimum daily balance of $100 through the end of February 2023, Alliant Credit Union will give you a $100 bonus deposit and also make a $100 charitable donation.
This is an easy way to do some good for you, and your community. Just think – if 5,000 people earn their bonuses, that’s $500,000 in charitable donations!
International Pharmaceutical, Front Office Specialist, Sales, Management, Fine Arts, Antiques, Museums, Antiques, Exhibitions, Jewelry
2y"Money Monday w/ Suze Orman" - I treasure your information. Thank you very much.
Power Play Solutions CEO
2yThank you, you’re the best👍💰
Online Marketer
2yGreat information as always Suze. Thank you so much.
Business Owner
2yI took out a HELOC about 6 years ago for a gunite pool for about 30k. I put a $5K deposit from my own account and paid it off in about 2 years and change. I understand not everyone can do it but paying all the interest and years of payments isn't worth it.