Home Equity Lines of Credit
Alright, you've been a homeowner for some 10 years now, and you've decided it's time for improvement
and expansion. What is the best way to obtain the funding for home improvement projects? A home equity line
of credit is often the most feasible and profitable way to access extra cash for home improvement. How do you
obtain home equity credit? What lenders provide home-equity credit? And who qualifies for home-equity
created? All these questions will be answered in the following paragraphs, and hopefully from the information
below, you'll be at a more educated consumer.
All the equity lines of credit are obtained based on the amount of equity you have built into your
column. If you had your mortgage for over 10 years you have established a considerable amount of equity and
should be able to draw on that equity to improve and make repairs on your home. Fixed rate mortgages or
adjustable rate mortgages provide a consumer with the greatest opportunity for building equity in their home
while paying for their home interest-only loans, 125 loans, and balloon notes do not help the consumer build
equity over a very short time.
Quite often as we shop for mortgage products we don't stop to think about the "down the road" needs
we might experience as a homeowner. That's why today's market of interest-only loans and 125 loans do not
seem to operate in the consumer's favor. As you make your mortgage payment each month a portion of the
payment is diverted to the interest, and the remaining amount is applied to principal; it is through this
process that we build "equity" in our home.
Over the course of the life of the home, say 10 years from now, we manage to outgrow our homes, we
manage to overuse our homes and we manage to create a situation that is in need of repair. If you have a
fixed rate mortgage or an adjustable rate mortgage you have managed to build the equity in your home and you
high on the opportunity to open a home-equity line of credit, provided you have also taken care to protect
your credit rating.
The amount of equity of establishing your home and your credit rating will determine the credit
limit you receive on a home-equity line of credit. Your lending institution, your local bank, or for whom
ever holds your mortgage will be the entity you approach for a home-equity line of credit. So long as your
payments are up-to-date, your credit is good, and you have a substantial amount of equity in your home you
will qualify for a home-equity loan that is comparable to an open line of credit. You withdraw from your line
of credit as necessary. If your loan limit is say $10,000, and you need $4000 for plumbing repairs, you
simply write a check drawn on your line of credit account to cover the expense and you would begin to pay
interest on the loan amount of $4000. Seems to be a very simple way to operate wouldn't you say?
Many of the leading institutions think so thus they created a home-equity line of credit; it's a
benefit for the consumer and it's a benefit for the lending institution. The consumer has a quick way to draw
on the equity in their home, and the late institution has a great way to make a profit. So what would be the
downside of a home-equity line of credit? There doesn't seem to be one.
The only downside we've been able to find, with that of the consent of the purchases the interest
only loan, the 125 loan, or any of the many variations from these bases that does not allow for the building
of equity as the mortgage is paid. Quite often the consumer does not realize the potential danger when
purchasing interest-only and 125s. But the mortgage lender does, or should. It was for this very reason
during the 1920s at the interest only loan was shelved and taken from the market. We seem to have forgotten
the lessons learned. For the consumer a home without equity, is a home without protection. A home without
equity is not a benefit for the consumer.
Edited By Readabout Editorial
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