Home Equity Loan: Is It the Right Way to Tap Your Equity?
A home equity loan lets you borrow against the value you've built in your home. Unlike a HELOC (home equity line of credit), a home equity loan provides a lump sum at a fixed interest rate, making payments predictable for the life of the loan. In 2024, rates ranged from approximately 7.5–9.5% — significantly lower than personal loans or credit cards, but with your home as collateral.
How Much Can You Borrow?
The maximum you can borrow is determined by your Combined Loan-to-Value (CLTV) ratio. Most lenders cap CLTV at 85%, meaning if your home is worth $400,000 and you owe $240,000 on your primary mortgage, the maximum HE loan is $400,000 × 0.85 − $240,000 = $100,000. Lenders with CLTV caps of 80% would limit you to $80,000 in this example.
Home Equity Loan vs. HELOC: Key Differences
Both products use your home as collateral, but they differ in structure. A home equity loan gives you a lump sum at a fixed rate — best for one-time expenses where you know the total cost (home renovation, debt consolidation). A HELOC is a revolving credit line with a variable rate — best for ongoing expenses or projects where costs are uncertain. HELOCs often have lower initial rates but create payment risk if rates rise substantially.
Tax Deductibility (2024 Rules)
Under current IRS rules, interest on home equity loans is deductible ONLY if the loan is used to "buy, build, or substantially improve" the home securing the loan. Using equity for debt consolidation, education, or other personal expenses disqualifies the interest deduction. If you use the loan for home improvement and itemize deductions, the interest can provide meaningful savings — at a 22% bracket, $4,000 in annual interest generates $880 in tax savings, effectively reducing your rate from 8% to 6.24%.
Risks to Consider
The primary risk is foreclosure — your home is collateral. If you default on a home equity loan, the lender can foreclose. This makes discipline around use of funds essential. Avoid using home equity for depreciating assets or consumption expenses. Home improvement projects that add documented value are the most financially sound use of equity debt.