Is Paying Off Your Credit Cards with a Home Equity Loan a Good Idea?
Trading Unsecured Debt for Secured Debt
Unsecured debt
Right now, your credit cards represent unsecured debt. This means that you have no tangible assets attached to it. It means that if you don't pay, then your creditors can try to collect, but they can't take something (like your house or car) away from you. They can damage your credit score -- which can be painful in terms of future financial opportunities -- but there is little else they can do.
Secured debt
Secured debt, on the other hand, is the complete opposite. You have something -- a house or a car or some rare heirloom -- as collateral to ensure the payment of your loan. Secured debt is something that lenders and creditors can come after if you fail to pay. When you have secured debt, the item you use as collateral is the rightful property of the lender in the case that you default.
Exchanging unsecured debt for secured debt
You can begin to see where there might be a problem with paying off your credit cards with a home equity loan. You are taking debt that was once unsecured, and then attaching it to your home (your most valuable asset). Instead of protecting your home in the case of collections, you are now putting your home at risk. This is a serious matter. While paying off your credit cards with a home equity loan can be helpful, if something unforeseen happenings, and you can no longer make your payments, your house is on the line.
Besides, it is becoming more difficult to get a home equity loan to pay of credit cards anyway. With home values falling, many lenders are wary of the home equity loan. And you should be, too. Even if you do get a home equity loan, what if your home value falls? Will it end up making you upside down on your equity? Many people are finding that their home equity loans are now the reason that they have negative equity in many declining markets.
Before paying off your credit cards with a home equity loan, consider your options. There are other debt consolidation and credit counseling options. There is no call to secure your unsecured credit card debt with your home.
Published by Jean Marquit
Jean is a freelance writer living the dream and working from home. When not working, she enjoys playing with her husband and their son. Reading, traveling, and playing chess are her hobbies. View profile
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2 Comments
Post a CommentThe point of this article was to point out the pitfalls of the practice, not the advantages. Right now, many people are finding that home equity loans are not the best choice for their credit card debt, due to falling housing values and economic uncertainty. In such cases, one may not be able to hang on to the home to get the tax benefits.
You failed to mention the tax benefits of a home equity loan/line versus a credit card. Normally, the home equity interest paid is tax deductible, where the credit card interest is not.
Also, home equity loans offer the potential for a low fixed rate for a set amount of time (danger abounds, however, if you elongate your debt over a 10-30 year term).