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Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC)

Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) differs from a lump sum Morgage in that the highest loan limit amount does not need to be received by the borrower upon the close of escrow.

In a typical Morgage, the Borrower receives the entire value of the loan amount when the loan "closes."

Home Equity Lines act more like a credit cards; a line limit is set by the Lender to be retreived at will by the Borrower in whatever amount below the approved maximum limit is agreed between the parties; The Borrower can also work with the Lender to increase the loan limit after the initial line of credit has been granted and payments have been made in a prompt manner by Borrower; and some Banks even issue actual credit cards for use by Borrower, which are linked to the HELOC balance directly.

Morgage Refinance Rate-Term vs. Cash-Out Morgage Refinance


A rate-term morgage refinance has a home loan amount that is just enough to re-pay the balance of your existing Morgage loan. The purpose of the morgage refinance could be to reduce your Morgage interest rate, adjust your home loan term, or both. Cash-out morgage refinancing, has a home loan amount that exceeds the current Morgage balance. The higher loan amount converts some of your home equity into cash that you receive at loan closing.

Home Equity Loan and Home Equity Line of Credit

A home equity loan has a fixed interest rate and term, your payment is the same every month. A home equity line of credit has a variable interest rate with a draw period of 10 years and a repayment period of 15 or 30 years. During the draw period, your monthly payment may be as low as the interest on your outstanding balance. Home equity loans offer terms between five and 30 years. Home equity lines of credit can be drawn on for 10 years.

morgage Calculator


Morgage calculators are often one of the first steps in the morgage refinance process. Use a morgage calculator to determine the morgage amount you can afford and the monthly Morgage payment. If you'd like to qualify for a larger morgage when refinancing, then use our morgage calculator and consider an adjustable rate morgage. An adjustable rate Morgage has a lower interest rate than a fixed rate morgage. The lower interest rate will allow you to qualify to borrow more money, for the same monthly Morgage payment.

morgage Qualification


To determine the maximum Morgage amount and monthly payment that you can afford for your new home or your morgage refinance, use our morgage calculator. morgage calculators can also be used to calculate payments for home equity loans or debt consolidation loans. Each Morgage calculator makes it simple to estimate how much you can afford to borrow and your monthly payment.

morgage Loan


If you know the monthly Morgage payment that you'd like for your morgage refinance, then use the morgage calculator to simply calculate the morgage loan amount based on the term of the loan and interest rate.

Morgage Prepayment


If you're thinking of refinancing your current morgage loan for a lower monthly Morgage payment, then enter the new morgage refinancing terms, add an additional amount to the monthly principal payment and calculate the interest saved by paying your Morgage loan balance in less time.

morgage Amortization


It's easy to keep track of the principal, interest and Morgage balance of your loan with our morgage calculator.

Morgage Refinance Calculator


If you are considering refinancing your present morgage loan, then use our morgage calculator to compare your present loan with the new morgage loan. Even though the monthly payment may be lower, the total of payments may be greater for the new loan.