Access Options · Guide 04

HELOC vs. Home Equity Loan

Both products let you borrow against your equity while keeping your first mortgage in place. The difference is the shape of the borrowing: one is a lump sum with fixed installments, the other is a flexible line you draw as needed.

Side-by-side

FeatureHome equity loanHELOC
PayoutOne lump sum at closingDraw as needed during draw period
Interest rateUsually fixedUsually variable (some offer fixed-rate locks)
PaymentFixed principal + interest from day oneOften interest-only during draw, then principal + interest
PredictabilityHigh — same payment for the termLower — payments move with rates and balance
Interest charged onThe full amount borrowedOnly what you have drawn
Typical best fitOne-time, known expenseStaged or uncertain expenses

How a home equity loan behaves

You borrow a fixed amount — say an illustrative $60,000 — and repay it over a set term such as 10, 15, or 20 years at a fixed rate. The payment never changes, which makes budgeting simple. Interest starts accruing on the whole $60,000 immediately, even if the project it funds happens gradually.

How a HELOC behaves

A lender approves a maximum line — say $100,000. For the draw period (commonly around 10 years) you borrow and repay freely, paying interest only on the outstanding balance, often with interest-only minimum payments. Afterward the line closes and you repay principal and interest over the repayment period (often 10–20 years).

Two behaviors deserve special attention:

  • Payment shock. When the draw period ends, the minimum payment can jump substantially — the loan converts from interest-only on a variable rate to fully amortizing. Owners who treated the HELOC as a permanent balance are often surprised.
  • Variable rates. HELOC rates typically float with a benchmark. If rates rise two or three percentage points, so does your cost — check the lifetime cap in the agreement.

Costs to compare

For either product, look beyond the headline rate: origination or application fees, appraisal fees, annual fees (HELOCs), early-closure fees (HELOCs closed within the first years), and closing costs generally. Some lenders waive fees but price them into the rate. The APR and the total-cost-over-term are the honest comparison figures.

Which fits which situation?

A home equity loan tends to fit a single, known expense — consolidating specific debts, one major renovation with a firm bid, a one-time purchase — for a borrower who values a fixed payment above all.

A HELOC tends to fit phased projects or standby needs — a multi-stage renovation, irregular tuition bills, an emergency reserve — for a borrower comfortable with variable payments who is disciplined about repaying draws.

Both carry the same fundamental risk: your home secures the debt. A borrower who could not repay an unsecured loan would face collections; a borrower who cannot repay a home equity loan or HELOC can face foreclosure. That risk should shape how much you borrow and for what purpose — borrowing against a home to fund routine spending is a well-known warning sign.

Questions to ask any lender

  1. What is the APR, and how does it differ from the rate?
  2. For HELOCs: what index and margin set the rate, how often can it adjust, and what are the periodic and lifetime caps?
  3. What does the payment become after the draw period ends?
  4. What are all fees — origination, appraisal, annual, early closure?
  5. Is there a prepayment penalty?

Interest on home equity borrowing may or may not be tax-deductible depending on how the funds are used — see Home Equity and Taxes.

This guide is educational only and is not financial, legal, or tax advice.