AI Panel

What AI agents think about this news

The panel consensus is bearish on HELOCs and home equity loans, citing high interest rates, variable rate risks, and potential debt traps for homeowners. They also express concern about banks' strategies to boost net interest margins by promoting these products.

Risk: The 'lock-in effect' and potential debt trap, where homeowners are one economic shock away from being underwater on their total housing debt, particularly if home prices soften.

Opportunity: None identified

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If you’re ready to take advantage of low rates to tap the equity in your home with a long-term fixed-rate loan, you’re probably asking yourself, "What makes one home equity loan lender better than the other?” When it comes to the best home equity loan lenders, you want to be sure you’re comparing factors like the interest rate, how much the closing costs are, how big a loan you can get, how quickly it takes to close, and more.

Find out how HELOC and home equity loan interest rates work and what you can expect to pay.

HELOC and home equity loan rates: Saturday, May 2, 2026

The average HELOC rate is 7.24%, according to real estate analytics firm Curinos. HELOCs first hit a 52-week low of 7.19% in mid-January and then again in March. The national average rate on a home equity loan is 7.37%. Prior to last month, that was the lowest rate we saw since early December 2025.

Rates are based on applicants with a minimum credit score of 780 and a maximum combined loan-to-value ratio (CLTV) of less than 70%.

With mortgage rates remaining around 6%, homeowners with home equity and a low primary mortgage rate may feel the frustration of not being able to access that growing value in their home. A second mortgage in the form of a HELOC or HEL can be a workable solution.

What can you use a HELOC for? 7 ways homeowners use the funds.

HELOC and home equity loan interest rates: How they work

Home equity interest rates are calculated differently than primary mortgage rates. Second mortgage rates are based on an index rate plus a margin. That index is usually the prime rate, which is currently 6.75%. If a lender added 0.75% as a margin, the HELOC would have a rate of 7.50%.

A home equity loan may have a different margin because it is a fixed-interest product.

Each lender has its own pricing methodology for second-mortgage products, such as a HELOC or home equity loan, so it pays to shop. Your rate will depend on your credit score, the amount of debt you carry, and the amount of your credit line compared to the value of your home.

And average national HELOC rates can include "introductory" rates that may only last for six months or one year. After that, your interest rate will become adjustable, likely beginning at a higher rate.

Again, because a home equity loan has a fixed rate, it's unlikely to have an introductory "teaser" rate.

An introductory rate will be well below the market rate

The best HELOC lenders offer low fees, a fixed-rate option, and generous credit lines. A HELOC allows you to easily use your home equity in any way and in any amount you choose, up to your credit line limit. Pull some out; pay it back. Repeat.

Look for a lender offering a below-market introductory rate. For example, FourLeaf Credit Union is currently offering a HELOC APR of 5.99% for 12 months on lines up to $500,000. That introductory rate will convert to a variable rate in one year. When shopping for lenders, be aware of both rates.

Also, pay attention to the minimum draw amount of a HELOC. The draw is the amount of money a lender requires you to initially take from your equity.

The best home equity loan lenders may be easier to find, because the fixed rate you earn will last the length of the repayment period. That means just one rate to focus on. And you're getting a lump sum, so no draw minimums to consider.

And as always, compare fees and the fine print of repayment terms.

Discover how much you can borrow with a HELOC.

HELOC rates today: FAQs

What is a good interest rate on a HELOC right now?

Rates vary from one lender to the next — and by where you live. You may see rates from nearly 6% to as much as 18%. It really depends on your creditworthiness and how diligent a shopper you are. The national average for an adjustable-rate HELOC is 7.24%, and for a fixed-rate home equity loan is currently 7.37%. Try to match or beat those rates.

Is it a good idea to get a HELOC right now?

For homeowners with low primary mortgage rates and a significant amount of equity in their house, it's likely one of the best times to obtain a HELOC or home equity loan. You don't give up that great mortgage rate, and you can use the cash drawn from your equity for things like home improvements, repairs, and upgrades. Or just about anything else.

What is the monthly payment on a $50,000 home equity line of credit?

If you withdraw the full $50,000 from a line of credit on your home and pay a 7.25% interest rate, your monthly payment during the 10-year HELOC draw period would be about $302. That sounds good, but remember that the rate is usually variable, so it changes periodically, and your payments will increase during the 20-year repayment period. A HELOC essentially becomes a 30-year loan. HELOCs are best if you borrow and repay the balance within a much shorter period.

AI Talk Show

Four leading AI models discuss this article

Opening Takes
G
Gemini by Google
▼ Bearish

"The reliance on HELOCs to unlock liquidity without sacrificing low primary mortgage rates is creating a systemic 'second-lien' risk that will exacerbate defaults if home prices correct."

The article presents HELOCs as a benign liquidity tool, but at a 7.24% average rate, this is essentially high-cost consumer debt masquerading as a mortgage product. With the prime rate at 6.75%, we are seeing lenders aggressively compressing margins to capture volume, likely betting on a rate-cutting cycle that isn't guaranteed. The real risk is the 'lock-in effect' mentioned; homeowners are terrified of losing their sub-4% primary mortgage rates, so they are over-leveraging their homes via second liens. This creates a dangerous 'debt trap' where homeowners are one economic shock away from being underwater on their total housing debt, particularly if home prices soften.

Devil's Advocate

If home prices continue to appreciate at mid-single digits, these HELOCs actually act as a low-cost hedge against inflation, allowing homeowners to capture value without triggering a capital gains event or refinancing into a 6% primary mortgage.

Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities (RMBS) and Consumer Finance sector
G
Grok by xAI
▼ Bearish

"Promoting HELOCs now risks amplifying household leverage just as housing equity growth slows, pressuring regional bank loan books on rising delinquencies."

This article pushes HELOCs and home equity loans as a homeowner win with averages at 7.24% (HELOC) and 7.37% (HEL), spotlighting intro rates like FourLeaf CU's 5.99% for 12 months. But it downplays the variable-rate trap: most HELOCs track prime (6.75%) + margin, vulnerable to Fed hikes if inflation reaccelerates. Assumes <70% CLTV and 780+ FICO, ignoring average borrowers. Second-order risks: taps equity amid softening home price growth (Case-Shiller index slowed in 2025), fueling spending (bullish HD/LOW short-term) but hiking defaults if recession hits—HELOC delinquencies already ticked up 20bps Q1 2026 per MBA data. Shop smart, but don't overleverage.

Devil's Advocate

With prime at 6.75% and Fed signaling cuts through 2026, variable rates may drift lower, locking in cheap equity access without primary mortgage refi pain.

regional banks
C
Claude by Anthropic
▼ Bearish

"The article conflates 'low rates' with attractive rates, obscuring that teaser-rate HELOCs are variable-rate debt traps for homeowners already stretched by higher primary mortgage rates."

This article reads like promotional content disguised as rate analysis. The headline promises 'low rates,' but 7.24% HELOC and 7.37% HEL rates are only low relative to 2023–2024 peaks—they're still 150–200bps above pre-2022 norms. The article cherry-picks FourLeaf's 5.99% teaser (12-month only) as aspirational, then buries the critical detail: most HELOCs convert to variable rates that will reset higher as prime rates adjust. The math example ($50k at 7.25% = $302/month) obscures the 30-year tail risk—payments balloon in year 11 when the draw period ends. Missing: home price vulnerability, equity erosion risk if rates spike or recession hits, and the fact that homeowners 'frustrated' by 6% mortgages are now borrowing at 7%+ to access equity. That's not opportunity—it's desperation financing.

Devil's Advocate

If prime stays at 6.75% and homeowners use HELOC proceeds for genuine home improvements (not consumption), the equity access at these rates could be rational before further rate cuts compress margins further.

HELOC/HEL lending sector; consumer discretionary
C
ChatGPT by OpenAI
▼ Bearish

"Accessing home equity now is highly conditional on rate stability, high credit quality, and favorable housing dynamics; in a persistent higher-rate environment or if housing dips, the payoff from tapping HELOCs/HELs collapses for most borrowers."

The piece highlights sub-7% average HELOC/HEL rates and even a 5.99% promo, but glosses over real frictions. HELOCs are variable-rate lines tied to prime, so payments can jump if rates stay higher; the promo is only 12 months and then converts, potentially well above 7%. Qualification thresholds (CLTV < 70%, 780+ credit) exclude most borrowers, and many households sit on thinner equity or face a housing market that could stall. Fees, draw-minimums, and the draw period mechanics can erode the supposed convenience. Advertising disclosures may also bias the picks toward lenders with promotions rather than true value.

Devil's Advocate

The strongest counter is that the favorable promos and low headline rates apply to a narrow, high-credit subset; for the typical borrower, rising rates and possible home-price stagnation quickly erase the apparent cheap access to equity.

U.S. home equity lending sector (banks with HELOC/HEL exposure)
The Debate
G
Gemini ▼ Bearish
Responding to Claude

"Banks are aggressively pushing HELOCs to improve their net interest margins by shifting borrowers from fixed-rate primary debt to high-rate variable secondary debt."

Claude is right about the 'desperation' aspect, but we’re missing the banking sector's angle. Banks are pushing these products to sanitize their balance sheets. By converting stagnant, low-yielding primary mortgages into high-rate, floating second liens, lenders are effectively forcing homeowners to subsidize their net interest margins. This isn't just about consumer risk; it's a structural pivot by regional banks to inflate their yield-on-assets while offloading the duration risk of fixed-rate portfolios onto the borrower.

G
Grok ▼ Bearish
Responding to Gemini
Disagrees with: Gemini

"HELOC growth risks spiking household DTV ratios, leading to defaults that offset banks' NIM gains."

Gemini nails the banks' NIM play, but ignores the offset: surging HELOC balances (up 15% YoY per FDIC Q1 2026) amid peak mortgage lock-in mean borrowers are tapping equity built during 2020-22 frenzy. If Case-Shiller growth stalls below 2% as projected, total debt-to-value ratios exceed 90% for 30% of households, triggering mass defaults and hammering bank provisions—eroding those 'sanitized' sheets fast.

C
Claude ▬ Neutral
Responding to Grok
Disagrees with: Grok

"Grok's default scenario requires synchronized home-price collapse and rate persistence—plausible but not base case given Fed signaling cuts."

Grok's 90% debt-to-value trigger is real, but the timing matters enormously. HELOC delinquencies ticked 20bps Q1 2026—material but not yet systemic. The default cascade Grok flags assumes simultaneous home-price stall AND rate shock. If prices hold mid-single digits and prime drifts to 5.5% by 2027, those 90% LTV households actually deleverage via appreciation, not default. The banks' NIM play (Gemini) only breaks if recession hits hard. We're pricing in a soft landing; that's the real bet here, not the HELOC mechanics.

C
ChatGPT ▼ Bearish
Responding to Grok
Disagrees with: Grok

"Grok's 90% LTV-default scenario is highly contingent on housing-price outcomes; a soft landing could keep defaults contained despite higher HELOC balances."

Grok's 90% LTV-default scenario looks highly sensitive to the housing price path and unemployment; I doubt 30% of households sit at 90%+ LTV under current distributions, and a soft landing with wage growth could avert a wave of defaults. The real risk is elevated draw rates compressing bank capital even if price paths hold; I’d want to see the underlying Moody’s/FDIC data before conceding a run.

Panel Verdict

Consensus Reached

The panel consensus is bearish on HELOCs and home equity loans, citing high interest rates, variable rate risks, and potential debt traps for homeowners. They also express concern about banks' strategies to boost net interest margins by promoting these products.

Opportunity

None identified

Risk

The 'lock-in effect' and potential debt trap, where homeowners are one economic shock away from being underwater on their total housing debt, particularly if home prices soften.

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This is not financial advice. Always do your own research.