Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) Calculator

Modify the values and click the calculate button to use
Loan amount
Interest rate
Draw period ?years
Repayment period ?years

Closing costs ?
Amount
to be
Annual fee ?/year
 

Results

Draw period monthly pay$333.33
Repayment period monthly pay$477.83
Total of 240 payments$106,008.69
Total interest$56,008.69
47%53%Loan amountInterest
See your local HELOC rates

Amortization schedule

Year$0$25K$50K$75K$100K05101520BalanceInterestPayment

YearInterestPrincipalEnding Balance
1$4,000.00$0.00$50,000.00
2$4,000.00$0.00$50,000.00
3$4,000.00$0.00$50,000.00
4$4,000.00$0.00$50,000.00
5$4,000.00$0.00$50,000.00
6$3,934.99$1,798.92$48,201.08
7$3,785.68$1,948.23$46,252.84
8$3,623.98$2,109.94$44,142.91
9$3,448.85$2,285.06$41,857.85
10$3,259.19$2,474.72$39,383.13
11$3,053.79$2,680.12$36,703.01
12$2,831.35$2,902.57$33,800.44
13$2,590.43$3,143.48$30,656.97
14$2,329.53$3,404.39$27,252.58
15$2,046.96$3,686.95$23,565.63
16$1,740.95$3,992.96$19,572.67
17$1,409.54$4,324.38$15,248.29
18$1,050.61$4,683.30$10,564.99
19$661.90$5,072.01$5,492.98
20$240.93$5,492.98$0.00

The amount of line of credit you can borrow

Use the calculator below to estimate the maximum home equity line of credit amount you may be able to borrow, based on the value of your home, your remaining mortgage balance, and the loan-to-value (LTV) ratio acceptable by the lender.

Current value of your house
Outstanding balance of your mortgage
LTV ratio acceptable by the lender
 

How Much House Equity Can You Actually Tap? The HELOC Calculator Decoded

Most homeowners with significant equity never borrow against it. Not because they shouldn't. Because the math feels opaque, the risks feel hidden, and the calculators they find spit out numbers without context. A HELOC calculator cuts through this fog—if you know what it's actually computing, what it hides, and how to stress-test its outputs against reality. This guide walks through precise usage, exposes common blind spots, and shows how to model scenarios that banks won't volunteer.

The core function is straightforward: estimate borrowing capacity, project payments across draw and repayment phases, and surface total interest costs. But the gap between "calculator says" and "bank actually offers" can be tens of thousands of dollars. That gap is where informed decisions live or die.

What HELOC Calculators Actually Compute (And What They Don't)

Every HELOC calculator rests on three pillars: equity position, lender risk appetite expressed as combined loan-to-value (CLTV), and interest rate trajectory. The formula appears simple. Home value minus mortgage balance equals equity. Equity multiplied by CLTV limit equals maximum borrowing capacity. Rate applied to drawn balance equals payment.

Reality fragments this simplicity.

Consider a home valued at $450,000 with $280,000 remaining on the first mortgage. Raw equity: $170,000. At 85% CLTV, maximum total debt: $382,500. Subtract the mortgage. HELOC ceiling: $102,500. But this assumes the lender accepts the $450,000 valuation, applies 85% rather than 80%, and ignores debt-to-income ratios, credit score pricing tiers, and whether the property is owner-occupied or investment.

Most calculators stop at the ceiling. Few ask: what if the appraisal comes in low? What if your lender caps CLTV at 80% for cash-out transactions? What if the "variable rate" you're quoted includes a floor, a cap, or a teaser period that expires in six months?

The information gap matters. A borrower entering $450,000 value, $280,000 mortgage, 85% CLTV, and 8.5% rate sees a $102,500 line with $727 monthly interest-only during draw. Same borrower, hit with 80% CLTV and $430,000 appraisal, sees $64,000 available. Monthly: $453. The difference in accessible funds: $38,500. The calculator didn't lie. It just assumed optimal conditions.

Stress-testing requires deliberate pessimism. Run three valuations: your estimate, 5% below, 10% below. Run two CLTV scenarios: 80% and 85%. Run three rates: current quote, quote plus 2%, quote plus 4%. The pessimistic matrix—$405,000 value, 80% CLTV, 12.5% rate—yields $44,000 available, $458 monthly. The optimistic: $102,500, $727. The decision-relevant range spans $58,500 in available credit and $269 in monthly obligation. No single calculator run captures this.

The Draw Period Mirage: Why Interest-Only Payments Deceive

HELOC calculators typically show two payment modes. Draw period: interest-only on drawn balance. Repayment period: fully amortized principal-plus-interest over remaining term. The visual contrast is stark. A $75,000 balance at 8.75% shows $547 during 10-year draw. Same balance, entering 20-year repayment: $661. The increase seems manageable. Twelve percent bump.

Wrong frame.

The $661 payment eliminates the $75,000 over 20 years. Total outflow: $158,640. The $547 payments during draw? They reduce nothing. If the borrower drew $75,000 immediately and paid interest-only for ten years, then entered repayment: still $75,000 principal, now $661 for 20 years. Total outflow: $65,640 interest during draw plus $158,640 during repayment. $224,280 to borrow $75,000.

Some borrowers never confront this. They assume "line of credit" means revolving, reusable, like a credit card. It can. But many enter repayment with balances they expected to manage down gradually, only to find the gradual path closed. The calculator's phase transition—one number to another number—hides the behavioral trap.

More sophisticated calculators allow "draw patterns." $20,000 year one, $15,000 year three, repayment begins with $35,000 balance. These are rarer. More valuable. They reveal that payment shock depends not on maximum line but on draw timing and repayment strategy. A borrower drawing $50,000 in year nine of a ten-year draw faces $365 monthly for one year, then $438 for twenty years. Same maximum line, different cost structure entirely.

Variable Rate Mechanics: The Calculator's Most Dangerous Assumption

Nearly all HELOCs carry variable rates. The calculator asks for "interest rate." You enter 8.75%. The calculator projects payments at 8.75% indefinitely. This is fiction.

Most HELOCs tie to prime rate plus margin. Prime moves with Federal Reserve policy. Margin is lender-specific, often 0% to 2%, locked at origination. The rate formula: Prime + Margin. Prime at 8.50%, margin at 0.25%: 8.75%. Prime rises to 10.00%: 10.25%. Prime hits 12.00%: 12.25%.

Historical prime range since 1970: 3.25% to 21.50%. Since 2000: 3.25% to 8.50%. The calculator's single-rate projection assumes stability in a product designed for fluctuation.

Rate caps exist but vary. Lifetime caps of 5% or 6% above start rate are common. Periodic caps—maximum increase per adjustment period—may be 1% or 2%. Some loans have floors: rates won't fall below 4% or 5% regardless of prime. The calculator rarely requests these parameters. The borrower rarely knows to ask.

Modeling variable rates properly requires scenario trees, not single inputs. Base case: prime holds at 8.50%, effective rate 8.75%. Moderate stress: prime rises 2% over three years, stabilizes at 10.50%, effective rate 10.75%. Severe stress: prime rises 4%, effective rate 12.75%. Catastrophic: prime hits 12.50%, effective rate 12.75% (assuming lifetime cap).

On $75,000 drawn: base case interest-only $547. Moderate stress: $672. Severe stress: $797. The $250 monthly swing between base and severe—$3,000 annually—rarely appears in household budgets built around the calculator's first output.

Some calculators now offer "rate sensitivity" sliders. Use them aggressively. The relevant question isn't "what's my payment at today's rate?" It's "what's my maximum payment before I default, and how likely is that threshold?"

Hidden Costs the Calculator Omits

Annual fees. Inactivity fees. Early termination fees. Appraisal costs. Title search. Recording fees. Origination points. These inhabit the space between calculator output and closing disclosure.

Typical annual fee: $50-$100, sometimes waived first year. Inactivity fee: $50-$100 if no draw in 12 months—relevant for backup liquidity seekers. Early termination: $300-$500 if closed within three years. Appraisal: $400-$600 for full appraisal, $150-$250 for automated valuation model (AVM). Origination: 0% to 1% of line amount.

On a $100,000 line, first-year costs excluding interest: potentially $150-$800. Spread over typical 5-7 year holding period: material but rarely calculator-visible. The borrower comparing HELOC to cash-out refinance sees rate-only comparison. The refinance has higher closing costs ($3,000-$5,000) but no annual fees, no draw period expiration, fixed rate. The calculator doesn't compute this trade-off. The borrower must.

Tax treatment shifted in 2018. Prior law: interest deductible up to $100,000 regardless of use. Current law: deductible only if used to buy, build, or substantially improve the home securing the loan. The calculator doesn't ask "purpose." The IRS will. A borrower consolidating $50,000 credit card debt loses deductibility. At 8.75% effective, after-tax cost at 22% bracket: 6.83% if deductible, full 8.75% if not. The 1.92 percentage point spread is calculator-invisible but decision-critical.

Precision Techniques: Running the Calculator Like an Underwriter

Banks evaluate HELOC applications through layered filters. Value. CLTV. DTI. Credit score. Property type. Occupancy. Income documentation. Calculators simulate only the first two. Precision requires approximating the rest.

Valuation discipline: Don't use Zestimate as single source. Cross with Redfin estimate, recent comparable sales within 0.5 miles and 6 months, square footage adjustments. If range spans $420,000-$480,000, use $440,000 for conservative planning. Lenders often use AVMs that lag market turns; in declining markets, AVMs overstate. In rising markets, they may understate. Direction matters.

CLTV layering: Primary residence, 720+ FICO, W-2 income: likely 85%. Self-employed, 680 FICO, investment property: likely 75% or 80%. Some lenders cap investment property HELOCs at 70%. The calculator's default 85% may not apply. Call two lenders before running final numbers. Their CLTV matrices are proprietary but not secret.

Rate quoting: The "as low as" rate advertised requires 740+ score, 80% CLTV, auto-pay enrollment. Your actual margin may be 0.75% higher. Request rate sheets or pre-qualification quotes that specify margin, not just "current rate." The margin is what you're actually locking.

Payment verification: After calculator output, manually verify. Interest-only: (Balance × Rate) ÷ 12. Amortized: PMT function or formula. Calculator errors exist. More commonly, users misread—entering APR instead of rate, confusing 30-year amortization with 20-year repayment term. The 10-year difference on $75,000 at 8.75%: $661 versus $587. The calculator may default to 30-year; the HELOC contract specifies 20. Read the fine print. Verify independently.

Strategic Use Cases: When the Calculator Supports Decision, Not Just Curiosity

Three borrower archetypes benefit from structured calculator use. Each requires different inputs, different stress tests, different exit planning.

The Renovator: Needs $60,000 for kitchen, bath, addition. Draws incrementally as contractors invoice. Key calculator runs: phased draw pattern ($15K, $20K, $25K over 18 months), interest-only during 18-month construction, then full amortization. Critical stress: what if project extends to 30 months? What if rates rise 2% before completion? The renovator's risk is draw period exhaustion—project unfinished, repayment beginning, payments on full balance while still paying contractors.

The Debt Consolidator: $45,000 credit card debt at 19.99% APR. HELOC at 8.75%. Calculator shows payment drop from $1,125 (minimums) to $328 (interest-only). Tempting. But debt consolidation fails when behavior doesn't change. The calculator must model: full amortization payment ($394 for 20 years), no new credit card balances, and the lost deductibility if cards were used for non-home purposes. The real comparison: total interest over payoff period, not monthly payment. Credit cards at minimums: 15+ years, $35,000+ interest. HELOC amortized: 20 years, $49,500 interest. The HELOC wins only if payoff accelerates. The calculator won't suggest this. The borrower must.

The Liquidity Buffer: Opens $100,000 line, draws nothing. Annual fee: $75. Cost of unused capacity: $750/decade. Calculator relevance: minimal for payments, high for opportunity cost. What return could $100,000 earn invested? What catastrophe does it protect against? The buffer builder should model draw scenarios—job loss, medical emergency, investment opportunity—at various timing and rate environments. The calculator becomes scenario library, not payment estimator.

The Refinance Crossover: When HELOC Loses to Alternatives

Calculators evaluate single products. Decisions require comparison. The HELOC's primary alternatives: cash-out refinance, personal loan, credit card promotional rate, portfolio loan against investments.

Cash-out refinance: new first mortgage, larger balance, fixed rate, 30-year term. Advantage: rate typically 1-2% below HELOC, payment stability, no draw period expiration. Disadvantage: higher closing costs, resets mortgage clock, pays closing costs on entire balance not just cash needed. Break-even math: monthly savings from lower rate versus closing costs, time horizon.

Example: $450,000 home, $280,000 mortgage, need $60,000. HELOC at 8.75%, interest-only $438, then amortized $526. Cash-out refi at 7.00% on $340,000: $2,261 monthly versus current $1,860 plus HELOC payment. The refi bundles; the HELOC layers. The comparison requires full budget modeling, not product-specific calculators.

Personal loan: unsecured, fixed rate, 5-7 year term. Rates 10-18% for prime borrowers, higher for others. No home collateral, no foreclosure risk. For $60,000, payment at 12% over 7 years: $1,060. Higher than HELOC, but eliminates rate risk and collateral exposure. The calculator won't show this trade-off. The borrower must construct it.

Behavioral Traps: When Accurate Calculation Leads to Wrong Action

Precision without purpose is dangerous. Several patterns recur.

Payment myopia: Fixating on monthly outflow, ignoring total cost. The interest-only $547 feels manageable. The $224,280 total to borrow $75,000 does not. But the latter figure requires manual computation; the former appears instantly. The calculator's design nudges toward myopia.

Line maximization: Taking the full available amount because it's available. Behavioral finance calls this "mental accounting"—the credit line feels like "my money" rather than "my debt." The calculator shows capacity; it doesn't distinguish prudent use from maximum extraction.

Rate anchoring: The first rate seen—8.75%, say—becomes reference point. Subsequent quotes at 9.25% feel expensive, at 8.25% feel cheap. But the anchor may be unrepresentative. The calculator's single input field reinforces this. Breaking it requires multiple runs, multiple quotes, active rejection of first-seen numbers.

Phase neglect: The draw period feels permanent; repayment feels distant. Ten years is long enough to forget structure, short enough to arrive suddenly. The calculator shows both phases side-by-side; the borrower sees only the first column. Behavioral fix: calculate repayment payment first, ask "can I pay this now?" If not, the draw period payment is irrelevant.

Regulatory Landscape: Post-2008 Guardrails and Gaps

The 2010 Dodd-Frank Act and subsequent CFPB rules changed HELOC disclosures. Lenders must provide clearer rate adjustment notices, earlier repayment warnings, and standardized "Your Home is Collateral" notices. But the calculator ecosystem—lender-provided, third-party, app-based—remains lightly regulated.

No federal standard requires calculators to show lifetime cost, rate sensitivity, or early termination scenarios. The CFPB's "Know Before You Owe" mortgage initiative improved closing disclosures but didn't extend to pre-application tools. State laws vary: California requires specific HELOC counseling for high-cost loans; Texas has unique home equity restrictions from its constitution. The calculator knows none of this.

Borrowers in community property states (Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Washington, Wisconsin) face additional complexity: spouse consent requirements, signature rules, potential homestead protections. The calculator ignores legal structure entirely.

Building Your Own Verification Model

For major borrowing decisions, replicate calculator outputs independently. Spreadsheet construction:

Inputs: Home value (cell B1), Mortgage balance (B2), CLTV limit (B3), Margin (B4), Prime rate (B5), Draw period years (B6), Repayment period years (B7), Draw amount (B8), Draw timing (B9).

Equity: =B1-B2

Max line: =MIN(B1*B3-B2, B1*0.9-B2) [if lender has absolute 90% cap]

Effective rate: =B4+B5

Interest-only payment: =B8*(B4+B5)/12

Repayment payment (if drawn immediately): =PMT((B4+B5)/12, B7*12, -B8)

Total interest (immediate draw, interest-only draw, full amortization repayment): =B8*(B4+B5)*B6 + PMT((B4+B5)/12, B7*12, -B8)*B7*12 - B8

This skeleton catches calculator errors, tests rate scenarios, and forces explicit assumption documentation. The act of building reveals what the pre-built tool obscures.

The Verdict: Calculators as Starting Point, Not Endpoint

A HELOC calculator performs necessary but insufficient analysis. It computes. It does not judge. It projects. It does not warn. The gap between its output and your decision is filled by rate stress-testing, cost layering, behavioral honesty, and alternative comparison.

The precise user enters pessimistic valuations, tests rate shocks, adds hidden costs, verifies payment formulas, models draw patterns, compares to alternatives, and builds independent verification. The casual user sees a monthly payment and signs. The difference, over a typical HELOC lifecycle, can exceed $50,000 in unnecessary cost or unanticipated risk.

Your equity is real. The calculator's precision is partial. Your judgment must bridge the distance.

Disclaimer: This article provides educational information about HELOC calculators and home equity borrowing. It does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. Interest rates, lender terms, and tax treatment vary by jurisdiction and individual circumstances. Consult qualified professionals before making borrowing decisions. Home equity loans and lines of credit use your property as collateral; failure to repay may result in foreclosure. Past rate performance does not predict future rates. Verify all calculator outputs against lender disclosures and loan documents.