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Updated about 1 month ago on . Most recent reply
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Using Home Equity for Fix/Flip or rental property
Hello everyone,
Happy New Year! I hope you all had a great start to 2025.
I have a question and would appreciate your input. I’ve done a couple of fix-and-flip projects in the past, both of which were financed through hard money lenders. While these deals were successful, I realized that the cost of using hard money significantly ate into my profits. In some cases, after crunching the numbers, the profit margin was so slim—or even negative—that I had to pass on some promising opportunities.
Here’s my situation: I currently own two properties—a primary residence and a rental property—both of which have substantial equity. I’m considering tapping into this equity to fund future fix-and-flip projects or even purchase another rental property.
My questions are:
- Do you think leveraging the equity in my properties is a smart move for real estate investments?
- Are there any potential risks or downsides I should keep in mind before proceeding?
I’d love to hear your thoughts, experiences, or advice on this approach.
Thank you in advance for your insights!
Most Popular Reply
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As several folks have mentioned leveraging equity in current property you owned is a great tool but still comes with the some of risks as you had before using hard money debt as there is never a guarantee your new project will be a success (there will always be risks with real estate investing).
Leveraging your investment property would probably be the first step I would take. If you use a DSCR loan you could maximize the equity you could take out while still breaking even on the mortgage + taxes + insurance. In this case even if the project went south and you broke even or even lost money, the equity (debt) you used would still be covered by the income you are earning on the rental property.
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@Shayan Sameer Yes in case the projects do not work as expected you will have an issue with paying off the HELOC on your properties unless you do a cash out refinance and then the risk is not so much as there is no second lien(HELOC)
Quote from @Shayan Sameer:
Hello everyone,
Happy New Year! I hope you all had a great start to 2025.
I have a question and would appreciate your input. I’ve done a couple of fix-and-flip projects in the past, both of which were financed through hard money lenders. While these deals were successful, I realized that the cost of using hard money significantly ate into my profits. In some cases, after crunching the numbers, the profit margin was so slim—or even negative—that I had to pass on some promising opportunities.
Here’s my situation: I currently own two properties—a primary residence and a rental property—both of which have substantial equity. I’m considering tapping into this equity to fund future fix-and-flip projects or even purchase another rental property.
My questions are:
- Do you think leveraging the equity in my properties is a smart move for real estate investments?
- Are there any potential risks or downsides I should keep in mind before proceeding?
I’d love to hear your thoughts, experiences, or advice on this approach.
Thank you in advance for your insights!
.
I think HELOC financing for flips falls into a couple of categories
1. Brand new investor - I wouldn't because of so many unknowns and lack of experience
2. Has done a couple of flips - maybe, if the flips were successful and the deal was the "right one" but couldn't find other financing
3. Lots of experience, has some reserves, good market and flipper has a healthy income to recover if things go wrong (probably Not a problem in this situation)
4. Desperate - experienced, nothing to lose type of situation, and the opportunity is so amazing that it is life changing (Ah what the heck, he was already on the edge, it may work, it may not, but he was in a desperate situation)
I wouldn't recommend it for normal people. People all of the time, "over estimate" the opportunity and "underestimate" the cost and challenges in doing a profitable flip. There ae also holding costs, After the flip you have real estate fees and closing costs to pay. Then you get to pay capital gains as well. You have to buy very low to make any money on the project. All of that eats into profit.
I always plan to have 6 months of holding costs available, for after I finish the flip, just in case I missed the market.
If a lot of houses are sitting on the market for a long time, (can't sell) I'd definitely avoid it.
Instead, Use a partner in a joint venture.
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- Residential Real Estate Agent
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Tapping into the equity is always great when it comes to recycling money quickly as you would a flip. You are still going to have holding costs and a heloc will just have less holding costs that you would if you were doing a personal line or hard money.
There is still a risk: You do not have the right outprice and lose money, your deal goes south due to unfound things when you bought it, then the rehab phase brings them up, and you spend more, and the market changes, which is something that can happen on a moment's notice. Other risks, the contractor walking off the job, a storm hitting and delaying the project for weeks, someone breaking into the home and stealing stuff (which happened just the other day to a client of mine), a squatter, or drunk driver driving into the house (happened a lot at my old job as a firefighter lol). That being said, anything can happen, but if you run your numbers accordingly, make sure that your contractor is trusted and do all the other stuff you'll be a little more protected than the next person flipping that does not do this type of calculation.
- Peter Mckernan
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As several folks have mentioned leveraging equity in current property you owned is a great tool but still comes with the some of risks as you had before using hard money debt as there is never a guarantee your new project will be a success (there will always be risks with real estate investing).
Leveraging your investment property would probably be the first step I would take. If you use a DSCR loan you could maximize the equity you could take out while still breaking even on the mortgage + taxes + insurance. In this case even if the project went south and you broke even or even lost money, the equity (debt) you used would still be covered by the income you are earning on the rental property.

Quote from @Zachary Deal:
As several folks have mentioned leveraging equity in current property you owned is a great tool but still comes with the some of risks as you had before using hard money debt as there is never a guarantee your new project will be a success (there will always be risks with real estate investing).
Leveraging your investment property would probably be the first step I would take. If you use a DSCR loan you could maximize the equity you could take out while still breaking even on the mortgage + taxes + insurance. In this case even if the project went south and you broke even or even lost money, the equity (debt) you used would still be covered by the income you are earning on the rental property.
Thanks, @Zachary Deal . I'm not familiar with the DSCR loan. Are you a lender? Can we go over the details?
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Quote from @Shayan Sameer:
Quote from @Zachary Deal:
As several folks have mentioned leveraging equity in current property you owned is a great tool but still comes with the some of risks as you had before using hard money debt as there is never a guarantee your new project will be a success (there will always be risks with real estate investing).
Leveraging your investment property would probably be the first step I would take. If you use a DSCR loan you could maximize the equity you could take out while still breaking even on the mortgage + taxes + insurance. In this case even if the project went south and you broke even or even lost money, the equity (debt) you used would still be covered by the income you are earning on the rental property.
Thanks, @Zachary Deal . I'm not familiar with the DSCR loan. Are you a lender? Can we go over the details?
Yes, happy to chat! Sent you a direct message/connection request
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HELOC: The Best Tool for Smart Investors
- Why It Works:
- Pay interest only when you use it.
- Got extra cash? Pay it back into the HELOC and save up to 14% (compared to hard money loans).
- Need cash again? Just withdraw it—it’s like a checking account.
- The Risks (Depends Who You Ask):
- A lawyer says everything can go wrong.
- An insurance agent says the same (so they can charge more).
- An engineer? Still overanalyzing.
- A risk-taker might lose your money.
What You Should Do:
Figure out what kind of investor you are. Get knowledge, follow experienced people, and leverage wisely.
My Take:
If you have two houses, excellent credit, and motivation to build wealth, you can learn to manage your money responsibly.
Use HELOC, credit cards, and business credit funding to leverage your cash and buy properties faster. The key to wealth is smart leverage and action.
Luis Maqueira
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Quote from @Shayan Sameer:
Hello everyone,
Happy New Year! I hope you all had a great start to 2025.
I have a question and would appreciate your input. I’ve done a couple of fix-and-flip projects in the past, both of which were financed through hard money lenders. While these deals were successful, I realized that the cost of using hard money significantly ate into my profits. In some cases, after crunching the numbers, the profit margin was so slim—or even negative—that I had to pass on some promising opportunities.
Here’s my situation: I currently own two properties—a primary residence and a rental property—both of which have substantial equity. I’m considering tapping into this equity to fund future fix-and-flip projects or even purchase another rental property.
My questions are:
- Do you think leveraging the equity in my properties is a smart move for real estate investments?
- Are there any potential risks or downsides I should keep in mind before proceeding?
I’d love to hear your thoughts, experiences, or advice on this approach.
Thank you in advance for your insights!
Hi Shayan,
You will be able to close on properties quickly and have access to rehab funds immediately if you are able to qualify for a HELOC that can cover both the purchase and rehab.You should be careful though as if you cannot sell the property or you run out of rehab funding, you may end up being over leveraged. I would recommend to partner up with an experienced investor to really solidify your numbers. If you are already experiencing slim profits with a fix and flip loan, it will not be any better on a HELOC. You may save a few thousand dollars going this route, but may lose a few hundred thousand dollars if you are not dialing in on your strategy and numbers.
- Erik Estrada
- erik@luxeprivateinvestments.com
- 818-269-7983
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