Home Equity Loans And Lines Of Credit: Similar loans, different purposes
By Michael D. Larson • Bankrate.com
By Michael D. Larson • Bankrate.com
Getting one's hands on an extra pile of cash has seldom been easier for homeowners than it is today, thanks to the recent deluge of home equity lending offers. Indeed, both lines of credit and traditional home equity loans, or second mortgages, can help make planned house repairs and additions a reality.
Yet consumers should consider several things before jumping into either financing product, experts say. That's because home equity lines of credit typically are a good deal for those who want a lower up-front rate and access to money at unpredictable times. However, home equity loans are better suited to those who need a specific amount of money and payment stability.
"With a home equity line of credit, you can open it and you're only going to pay for the amount of money you use," says Peter Traum, a Morris town, N.J. branch manager for Key Corp's Champion Mortgage lending subsidiary. "With a second mortgage, you're going to get a check, and you're going to make payments until you pay that amount off."
Both lending devices use a borrower's house as collateral, with lenders in either case assessing the property to determine how much they are willing to extend. The amount is determined by taking the assessed value and multiplying by a percentage figure, known as the loan-to-value ratio. Traditionally as high as 80 percent, that maximum ratio climbed to just over 90 percent in 1997.
For example, a lender evaluating a $100,000 house with $40,000 still outstanding on the first mortgage would multiply its value by 90 percent. The company would then take the $90,000 result, subtract the outstanding debt, and allow the borrower access to as much as $50,000 in credit.
Closing costs
Once the amount to be borrowed is set, a homeowner should next consider closing costs, which lenders say are roughly the same for both loans and credit lines. Borrowers may pay as little as $150 or as much as $800, though banks will sometimes waive fees for those who carry a large enough outstanding balance or maintain one for a sufficient amount of time.
As for the time involved, the application process will usually take one to two weeks from start to finish.
But that's where the similarities between the two lending products ends.
Homeowners with lines of credit only have to endure the application process once because they can write checks as needed up to their credit limit, rather than obtain multiple fixed-amount loans. In fact, they typically face only lender-financed credit reviews every one to three years to keep the lines open, and they usually don't even have to talk to their bank at that time, says Garry Fisher, a senior vice president in Wachovia Corp.'s retail product management division.
"A lot of banks, including Wachovia, are starting to use credit scoring and other statistical things in order to ascertain whether or not they even have to contact the customer," Fisher says. "They can just buy a credit score from a (credit) bureau or use an internal customer score."
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