
HELOC or Cash Out Refinance: How to Know Which One Actually Makes Sense for Your Equity Right Now
The Equity Question More Homeowners Are Asking Right Now
Second-lien borrowing just hit an 18-year high with more than half of all equity being accessed through HELOCs and home equity loans. That surge reflects something real happening in the market as homeowners with significant equity try to figure out the smartest way to put it to work without giving up the low first mortgage rates they locked in several years ago.
Nathan Rufty at Canopy Mortgage gets this question constantly and the answer depends heavily on how much equity you are looking to access and what you plan to do with it.
The Blended Rate Concept That Changes the Calculation
Before deciding between a HELOC and a cash-out refinance on the first mortgage it is worth understanding what is called the blended rate. Take the rate on your existing first mortgage. Take the rate on the HELOC or second mortgage you are considering. Add them together and divide by two. That blended rate gives you a clearer picture of your overall cost of borrowing across both loans combined and allows you to compare it more accurately to what a single refinanced first mortgage would cost.
That comparison is what tells you whether keeping the first mortgage intact and layering a second lien on top actually saves you money or whether the math points toward a different approach.
The $50,000 Threshold That Guides the Decision
As Nathan Rufty explains there is a general rule of thumb that applies to most equity access situations and it centers on the amount being pulled out.
If you are looking to access $50,000 or less and you can pay it back relatively quickly a HELOC is typically the better tool. You keep your existing first mortgage untouched. You only pay interest on what you actually draw. The flexibility of a revolving line allows you to use what you need when you need it. And if the amount is manageable and the payoff timeline is reasonable the HELOC does the job efficiently without requiring you to rewrite the entire mortgage structure.
If you are looking to pull out more than $50,000 the HELOC starts to become harder to justify as the primary solution. A HELOC is an adjustable rate product and that adjustment risk on a large outstanding balance over an extended period becomes a meaningful consideration. The rate can fluctuate up or down and if you are carrying a large HELOC balance during a period when rates are moving higher the payment impact can be significant.
In those situations the math on a cash-out refinance of the first mortgage deserves a serious look even if it means giving up a low existing rate. Nathan Rufty has run these scenarios and the calculation is not always as unfavorable as homeowners with low rates assume before they actually see the numbers.
When the Golden Rate Is Worth Giving Up
This is the hardest part of the conversation for homeowners who locked in rates at 2, 3, or 4 percent to hear. Sometimes refinancing that rate makes financial sense even at today's levels depending on what you are doing with the equity and what the alternative costs.
If you are carrying high-rate credit card debt at 22 percent or more and you are considering pulling out $125,000 at 6.5 to 8.5 percent through a cash-out refinance the math on that debt restructuring may still work significantly in your favor compared to leaving the high-rate debt in place. The question is not whether the new rate is lower than the old first mortgage rate. The question is whether the new blended cost of borrowing is lower than the cost of the debt you are eliminating.
Running that specific calculation with your actual numbers is the only way to know and that is exactly the conversation worth having with a loan officer who can put the scenarios on paper side by side.
What to Avoid Regardless of Which Option You Choose
Tapping retirement accounts or 401k funds to pay off debt is an approach Nathan Rufty strongly advises against. The tax consequences, potential early withdrawal penalties, and the permanent loss of compounding growth on money that leaves a retirement account make it one of the most expensive ways to access capital available to most homeowners. Your equity exists specifically as a financial resource that can be accessed without those penalties and without permanently disrupting your retirement trajectory.
The equity is there. It is going to continue growing. And it is accessible through tools that do not require robbing your future financial security to solve a present financial challenge.
Get the Numbers on Paper Before You Decide
The right answer for any homeowner considering equity access is not a general rule. It is the specific calculation run against your actual balance, your actual rate, the amount you want to pull out, and what you plan to do with it.
Nathan Rufty at Canopy Mortgage works with homeowners in California, Arizona, Nevada, and Utah to run exactly that analysis and identify whether a HELOC, a home equity loan, or a cash-out refinance produces the best outcome for their specific situation. Call or text Nathan Rufty at 909-503-5600 to explore your options and see what the numbers actually look like for you.
Sources
MortgageNewsDaily.com
ConsumerFinancialProtectionBureau.gov
Investopedia.com
BankRate.com
FederalReserve.gov


