A home equity loan is a fixed-rate, lump-sum loan you borrow against the equity in your home and repay in equal monthly installments over a set term — often called a second mortgage. You receive the full amount at closing and start paying it back immediately, with both principal and interest baked into a predictable payment. In 2026 the appeal is stability: a fixed rate and a fixed schedule, in contrast to the flexible-but-variable home equity line of credit. Because your home backs the loan, the rate is typically lower than unsecured borrowing, but defaulting can put the property at risk. This is general information, not personalized advice; verify your own situation.
How a home equity loan works
Equity is your home value minus your remaining mortgage balance. A lender lets you borrow against a portion of that equity, often keeping your combined loan-to-value somewhere around 80–90% depending on the lender and your credit profile.
Once approved, you receive a single lump sum and begin a fixed repayment schedule. Key traits:
- Fixed interest rate for the life of the loan in most cases.
- Set term, commonly somewhere in the 5 to 30 year range.
- Equal monthly payments that do not change with market rates.
- Closing costs that may apply, similar to a primary mortgage.
Home equity loan vs HELOC
These two products are easy to confuse, but they behave differently.
| Feature |
Home equity loan |
HELOC |
| Disbursement |
Lump sum up front |
Revolving line you draw from |
| Rate |
Usually fixed |
Usually variable |
| Payment |
Steady and predictable |
Changes with balance and rate |
| Best for |
One known, large expense |
Ongoing or uncertain costs |
| Reborrowing |
No |
Yes, during the draw period |
If you have one defined cost and want certainty, the lump-sum loan fits. If your spending is spread out, a HELOC may be the better tool.
When to use a home equity loan
- You have a single, well-defined expense. A roof replacement, a known renovation budget, or a fixed debt payoff amount.
- You value predictable payments. A fixed rate shields you from rising benchmarks.
- You have stable income. Steady cash flow makes the fixed payment manageable for the full term.
- The rate beats your alternatives. Compare against a personal loan or cash-out refinance before committing.
What to skip
- Borrowing for vague future needs. If you do not know the amount yet, a lump sum forces you to over-borrow or come up short.
- Stretching the term too far. A longer term lowers the payment but raises total interest paid.
- Ignoring closing costs. Fees can erode the benefit on smaller loan amounts.
- Tapping equity for routine spending. Securing everyday costs against your home raises the stakes unnecessarily.
FAQ
Is a home equity loan the same as a second mortgage?
Effectively yes. It is a loan secured by your home that sits behind your primary mortgage, which is why it is called a second mortgage.
Is the rate fixed or variable?
Most home equity loans carry a fixed rate, giving you a steady payment for the full term, unlike a typical variable-rate HELOC.
How much can I borrow?
It depends on your equity and the lender, but combined borrowing is often capped at roughly 80–90% of your home value. Confirm the limit with your lender.
What happens if I cannot pay?
Because the loan is secured by your home, default can lead to foreclosure. Borrow only what fits your budget for the full term.
Where to go next
Read what a HELOC is in 2026, how to get a mortgage in 2026, and is it worth paying off debt early in 2026.