Mortgage Refinance

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Wednesday, May 23, 2007

HOME EQUITY

HoMe Equity

What equity debt is?Home equity loans are an increasingly popular way to raise cash. Find out what the risks and rewards are. Your home is your castle -- and sometimes it's also your bank. The equity in your home -- the current appraised value minus the amount owed on the house -- can be tapped through loans at lower interest rates than credit cards. This chapter defines the types of home equity debt and the pitfalls of each. We also look at the tax advantage and low interest rates that make them such a popular option for borrowing.First, some definitions:Collateral is property that you pledge as a guarantee that you will repay a debt. If you don't repay the debt, the lender can take your collateral and sell it to get its money back. With a home equity loan or line of credit, you pledge your home as collateral. You can lose the home and be forced to move out if you don't repay the debt. Equity is the difference between how much the home is worth and how much you owe on the mortgage (or mortgages, if you have more than one on the property).A home equity loan or line of credit allows you to borrow money, using your home's equity as collateral. Wait. Don't click to another page. If the above paragraph seems like gibberish, you have surfed to the right place. We will explain what home equity is, what collateral is, how these loans and lines of credit work, why people use them, and what pitfalls to avoid.First, some definitions:Collateral is property that you pledge as a guarantee that you will repay a debt. If you don't repay the debt, the lender can take your collateral and sell it to get its money back. With a home equity loan or line of credit, you pledge your home as collateral. You can lose the home and be forced to move out if you don't repay the debt. Equity is the difference between how much the home is worth and how much you owe on the mortgage (or mortgages, if you have more than one on the property).
Example: Let's say you buy a house for $200,000.
You make a down payment of $20,000 and borrow $180,000.
The day you buy the house, your equity is the same as the down payment -- $20,000: $200,000 (home's purchase price) - $180,000 (amount owed) = $20,000 (equity).
Fast-forward five years. You have been making your monthly payments faithfully, and have paid down $13,000 of the mortgage debt, so you owe $167,000. During the same time, the value of the house has increased. Now it is worth $300,000. Your equity is $133,000: $300,000 (home's current appraised value) - $167,000 (amount owed) = $133,000 (equity) House purchase price: $200,000 Amount borrowed: -$180,000 Down payment/equity: $20,000 Five years later Amount borrowed: $180,000 Principal paid: -$13,000 Amount owed: $167,000 House's appraised value: $300,000 Amount owed: -$167,000 Equity $133,000 A home equity loan (or line of credit) is a second mortgage that lets you turn equity into cash, allowing you to spend it on home improvements, debt consolidation, college education or other expenses.Equity loans, lines of credit defined ... There are two types of home equity debt: home equity loans and home equity lines of credit, also known as HELOCs. Both are sometimes referred to as second mortgages, because they are secured by your property, just like the original, or primary, mortgage. Home equity loans and lines of credit usually are repaid in a shorter period than first mortgages. Most commonly, mortgages are set up to be repaid over 30 years. Equity loans and lines of credit often have a repayment period of 15 years, although it might be as short as five and as long as 30 years.


 
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