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Updated 1 day ago on . Most recent reply

Refinance or Not?
Hi All,
I have a rental I bought in 2022 here in Maryland for $220k at 4.25% interest and rehabbed it going about $125k in debt for rehab. The value of the house is now $550k. I moved all that debt to my primary residence home HELOC currently at 8.5% interest. The cashflow of the rent is $2000 which is very good. I originally was going to refinance immediately after finishing rehabbing, but the rates had gone up to around 5.5% which at that point in 2022 we thought was too high and it was tough to give up such a nice cashflow. Now, 3 years later, i have not been able to pay off the primary residence heloc which has stayed at its $125k balance (im 36 and married with 3 little kids in daycare so daycare costs have taken over).
I'm trying tro figure out if its worth cash out refinancing and paying off the $125k HELOC balance at the current 7% interest rates? Or should I just not refinance and keep the nice $2000 cashflow and work on budgeting to pay off the heloc from personal income over the next few years? Any advice here is appreciated.
Most Popular Reply

- Real Estate Broker
- Cody, WY
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I don't think you are being honest with the math.
The most expensive county in Maryland has an average rent of $2,300 for a 3-bed home. Let's assume yours is really nice and rents for $4,000.
You have an original loan of $220 plus a $125 rehab for a total loan of $345. You moved that all to your HELOC at 8.5% interest, so your payment is around $2,600. That only leaves you $1,400 and doesn't account for taxes, insurance, maintenance, vacancy, or any other expenses.
If you kept your original loan of $220 at 4.25% interest, your monthly payment would be $1100, and the $125 rehab at 8.5% would be $961 for a total of $2,060 per month. Again, even if you rented for $4,000 a month, you wouldn't have $2,000 left over after paying the mortgage, taxes, insurance, maintenance, etc.
So you aren't accounting for all your expenses, and you aren't paying off your debt. By your own admission, you are just paying interest on the $125k rehab loan. That's like not paying your $200 electric bill this month and claiming you saved $200. The truth is, the money is still owed, nothing was saved or earned, and you are just throwing money away on interest.
Here's a guide that describes what good cash flow looks like and how to analyze a property.
https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/rental-property-cash-flow...
- Nathan Gesner
