HELOCLedger
Updated April 2026 · 8-minute read

HELOC vs. Cash-Out Refinance: Which One Actually Costs Less?

Both let you borrow against your home equity. Both can be smart tools — and both can be expensive mistakes. The difference comes down to how the math behaves over the next ten or twenty years, not the headline rate you see on a lender's website.

The two products in one paragraph each

A home equity line of credit (HELOC) is a revolving credit line secured by your home. You qualify once, then draw from it as needed during a multi-year draw period, paying interest only on what you've actually borrowed. After the draw period closes, the remaining balance amortizes — principal plus interest — over a longer repayment period, typically ten to twenty years.

A cash-out refinance is a new first mortgage that replaces your current one. You borrow more than you currently owe, and you walk out of closing with the difference as a lump-sum check. The new mortgage's rate, term, and balance are now your only mortgage obligation.

The interest-rate landscape in 2026

After the rate-cycle reset, HELOCs sit roughly two to four points above the prime rate. That puts a typical HELOC in the 7%–10% range as of early 2026. Cash-out refinances are priced off the broader 30-year mortgage market and currently sit between 6.5% and 8% depending on credit and loan-to-value.

Important nuance: the HELOC rate is variable in almost every case. The cash-out refinance rate is normally fixed for the life of the loan. So a five-point gap today can compress or invert if prime drops — or it can widen if rates climb again.

The monthly payment math

Imagine you have $400,000 left on a 30-year mortgage at 4%, and you want to pull $50,000 in equity for a kitchen remodel. Here's how each path looks.

Path 1: HELOC for $50,000 at 8.5%

Path 2: Cash-out refinance to $450,000 at 7%

For most homeowners with a sub-5% existing mortgage, the HELOC is dramatically cheaper. The cash-out refinance only wins in narrow scenarios: when current mortgage rates are lower than your existing rate, when you need a large sum (more than ~$100k), or when you specifically want the predictability of a fixed rate locked in for thirty years.

Closing costs and fees

HELOCs are usually low-fee — many lenders waive the origination fee, and appraisals can be AVM-based (free or under $100). Cash-out refinances carry full mortgage closing costs, typically 2%–5% of the new loan balance. On a $450,000 cash-out, that's $9,000–$22,500 out of pocket or rolled into the loan. That gap matters most when the cash you're pulling is small relative to total loan size.

Tax treatment (briefly, and consult your accountant)

Under current US tax rules, interest on home-equity debt — whether HELOC or cash-out — is only deductible if the funds are used to buy, build, or substantially improve the home securing the loan. If you HELOC for a kitchen remodel, deductibility may be on the table. If you HELOC to consolidate credit-card debt or fund a vacation, it isn't.

We are not your tax advisor and tax law moves. Get a CPA opinion before relying on deductibility in your math.

Risk profile — what can go wrong

HELOC risks

Cash-out refinance risks

Decision framework — pick the one that fits

Pick a HELOC if: you need flexibility (you'll draw over time, not all at once), you have a low-rate first mortgage you don't want to disturb, you can stomach variable-rate risk, or the amount needed is modest (under ~$100k).

Pick a cash-out refinance if: current mortgage rates are at or below your existing rate, you need a single large sum, you want absolute payment certainty for the next thirty years, or you're consolidating multiple high-rate debts and the total picture is worth it.

What to do next

Run your actual numbers — yours, not the example — through our HELOC calculator. Save the result. Then call two lenders and compare what they actually offer against the math you ran here. The lender that gives you the cleanest, most-itemized quote is usually the lender worth dealing with.

Related reading

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This article is educational and not financial, tax, or legal advice. Confirm rates, closing costs, and tax treatment with your lender and accountant.