In the current environment (mid-2026), taking out a home equity loan or HELOC can still make sense, but the implications are more significant than they were during the ultra-low rate years. The biggest factors are interest rates, home value stability, and cash-flow flexibility.
Main Implications Right Now
Higher Interest Costs
Home equity rates are still relatively elevated compared to a few years ago.
- HELOCs usually have variable rates
- Home equity loans usually have fixed rates
That means:
- A HELOC payment can increase if rates rise again
- A fixed home equity loan gives predictability but may lock in a higher rate than you’d prefer
For example:
- A $100,000 loan at 8.5% looks very different than at 3–4%
- Monthly payments and total interest paid can be substantial
Reduced Financial Flexibility
Using home equity converts an asset into debt secured by your house.
If income changes or the economy weakens:
- You still owe the payment
- Missing payments can ultimately risk foreclosure
This matters more now because:
- Consumer debt levels are already elevated for many households
- Insurance, taxes, and maintenance costs have also risen
Home Values Are More Stable — Not Exploding
In many markets, prices are no longer rapidly climbing.
That means:
- Borrowing heavily against equity carries more risk
- You may not “grow out” of the debt through appreciation as quickly as people did from 2020–2022
For someone in real estate, this is important because leverage works best when appreciation and liquidity are strong.
Best Uses of Home Equity in This Market
Generally safer:
- Renovations that materially increase value
- Consolidating very high-interest debt
- Business investments with predictable returns
- Emergency liquidity reserves
Higher risk:
- Lifestyle spending
- Speculative investments
- Using a HELOC as ongoing income support
- Financing projects without clear ROI
HELOC vs Home Equity Loan Right Now
HELOC
Better if:
- You need flexibility
- You’ll draw funds gradually
- You expect rates may decline later and plan to refinance
Risks:
- Variable payment shocks
- Banks can reduce credit lines during downturns
Fixed Home Equity Loan
Better if:
- You know the exact amount needed
- You want stable payments
- You prefer budgeting certainty
Risks:
- Less flexible
- Locked into today’s rate environment
One Overlooked Issue: Liquidity
A lot of homeowners are “equity rich but cash-flow tight.”
Before borrowing, stress test:
- Can you comfortably handle the payment if business slows?
- What happens if taxes/insurance rise again?
- Could you still cover payments during a vacancy or slower market?
Strategic Consideration for Real Estate Professionals
Given your involvement in real estate and property marketing, a home equity product can make sense if it:
- Funds improvements with measurable resale upside
- Supports lead generation or brokerage growth with expected returns
- Helps bridge short-term investment timing
But using primary residence equity to support uncertain or long-term speculative projects is materially riskier in this rate environment than it was several years ago.
A Practical Rule
If the expected return or savings from using the funds is clearly higher than the loan rate — and cash flow remains comfortable even under stress — it can still be a smart tool.
If the payment only works assuming everything goes perfectly, it’s probably too aggressive in the current market.


