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from:Home Equity Loan Refinancing Information
A Home equity loan can be a life saver in times of unexpected financial need. You may have 3 or 4 credit cards maxed out; you may have unexpected medical bills to pile up on you. Times are hard, and fortunately homeowners that have been making their mortgage payments for a few years have built up some equity in their homes. The equity in your home is like cash in your hand. Equity loan refinancing can be done in different ways. The homeowner can ask for a cash out home equity home loan refinancing, or HELOC (home equity line of credit) equity loan refinancing.
Home equity loan refinancing is basically a second mortgage; the loan is secured by your home and the land it sits on, just like your original mortgage loan. HELOC equity loan refinancing can be done a couple of different ways. One really convenient way to use a HELOC loan is to use it like a credit card. You ask for a certain amount of your home’s equity to be available as a line of credit. You are given a special credit card that is attached to the loan. You pay revolving adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) rate on the balance used out of the equity each month. Another way to use HELOC equity loan refinancing is to cash out the equity as you need it in lump sums, rather in the form of a revolving credit account. This version of HELOC equity loan refinancing has a fixed rate mortgage, rather than an ARM.
HELOC equity loan is easy to get, and the credit or debit card makes it so easy to swipe that card for purchases. This line of credit is convenient, but the homeowner/borrower needs to treat that card like it is money that has to be paid back. One must be responsible and accountable when using this form of equity loan refinancing, because if the borrower makes more debt than his or her ability to pay the bank can foreclose on your loan, and the owner would either have to heal the defaulted payments or sell the property in a forced sale. As with any form of credit, it is good to have if you know how to be financially accountable for your spending.
Second mortgages, in the form of equity loan refinancing, generally are shorter than the primary loan, but not always. They can span from 5 years to 15 years and even some span up to 30 years. An equity loan lets you tap into as much as 75 percent of your home’s value that you can use to pay off credit cards, and other debts that have piled up over the years. You may even plan to send your children to college with the money you cashed out from your home equity loan refinancing. You can use this money any way you wish; you can even borrow more money than you owe and keep the rest in your savings account to have for a nest egg later on.
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