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HELOC vs Home Equity Loan
Hi everyone,
I purchased my primary resident in Queens, NY about 5 years ago. Thanks to crazy NY Real estate market, I have significant amount of equity on my PR which i'm considering tapping into to invest in other rental properties. I've looked around on past posts as well as google, but I can't seem to find any reason why anyone would choose HEL over HELOC. Let me know if I'm missing anything:
1. HELOC allows you to draw as much as you need (up to limit) when you need it, as opposed to HEL gives you everything at lump sum, whether you need everything or not.
2. HELOC allows you to pay interest only, where as HEL requires P&I like mortgage
3. HELOC are mostly Variable interest rate, but you CAN find fixed interest ones.
Let me know if i'm missing something. Thank you!
@Kevin Zhang unless you are referring to a TOTAL of $400k borrowed and not just the “Cash Out” portion that you are freeing up to invest.
My primary residence is now occupied by tenants back in WV. I'm currently living in WA state. I'm thinking of getting HELOC on that property. I've approached local credit union here in WA and Wells Fargo for HELOC but it didn't work. What other institutions do you recommend I approach?
HELOC's are awesome for new investors (like myself) that have equity in there primary residence. I would definitely shop around, I have a variable HELOC now just because the initial closing and appraisal was almost nothing. Appraisal can easily be $400+ plus several hundreds in closing so don't let a low rate sucker you in. I used a portion of my HELOC on a down payment on our first investment property and used the rest to fund the renovation.
@Manmath D. - Give Key Bank a try. They do HELOC on rentals.
Attention Mortgage Underwriters:
How does HELOC impact one's ability to get conventional financing? I see if you are using a HELOC then it would count against you debt-income ratio, but what if you have the credit line but don't use it? Will that limit how much you can borrow conventionally?
Ive asked that to my bank before and they told me only the used portion would impact your DTI calc but you would also have to provide your lender with copy of your HELOC agreement and also show how much balanve you owe. But maybe each bank is different.
@Joe Mercer maybe @Chris Mason can answer
Sounds like you've done your research! I too researched a HELoC and decided to go that route with funding and renovating my 1st property. The 10 year draw period along with the opportunity to lock in a fixed interest rate had me on the hook. It's still early in my repayment term, but it allowed me to pursue my dreams of financial freedom! Well wishes in whatever avenue you take to fund your deal 😊
Originally posted by @Michinori Kaneko:
Hi everyone,
I purchased my primary resident in Queens, NY about 5 years ago. Thanks to crazy NY Real estate market, I have significant amount of equity on my PR which i'm considering tapping into to invest in other rental properties. I've looked around on past posts as well as google, but I can't seem to find any reason why anyone would choose HEL over HELOC. Let me know if I'm missing anything:
1. HELOC allows you to draw as much as you need (up to limit) when you need it, as opposed to HEL gives you everything at lump sum, whether you need everything or not.
2. HELOC allows you to pay interest only, where as HEL requires P&I like mortgage
3. HELOC are mostly Variable interest rate, but you CAN find fixed interest ones.
Let me know if i'm missing something. Thank you!
HELOCs are awesome. Main driver behind my ability to scale my portfolio using simple interest & BRRRR strategy using it again and again.
@Joe Mercer thanks for the shoutout!
@Leo Poon
Why are you able to close quicker with a Heloc. I thought if you did a cash out refinance you get a check and the money is sitting in the bank ready to withdraw when a deal arises. Here trying to learn, please explain.