Your Home is Your Most Powerful Financial Asset. Let's Put It to Work.

Over the years, as you’ve paid down your mortgage and your property value has grown, you’ve built a powerful financial resource: home equity. Refinancing your mortgage allows you to strategically access that equity to fund your most important life goals, often at a much lower interest rate than other forms of borrowing.

Why Refinance? Common Goals We Can Achieve

How Does Refinancing Work?

Refinancing involves replacing your current mortgage with a new, larger one. You can typically borrow up to 80% of your home’s appraised value, minus what you still owe on your mortgage. The difference is paid out to you in a tax-free lump sum.

 

Choosing the Right Tool: Refinance vs. HELOC vs. Second Mortgage

Accessing your home’s equity isn’t a one-size-fits-all solution. Depending on your needs—whether you need a single lump sum for a large project or flexible access to cash over time—a different product may be more suitable. This is a critical choice that many homeowners find confusing, but understanding the differences is key to building the right financial strategy.

Mortgage Refinance
  • What It Is: Replacing your current mortgage with a new, larger one.
  • Max Loan to Value (LTV): Up to 80% of your home’s value.  
  • Interest Rate: Low (fixed or variable rates available).
  • When You Get Funds: One lump sum at closing.
  • Best Used for: Large, one-time expenses like a major renovation or significant debt consolidation.
  • Key Consideration: May involve a penalty if you break your current mortgage term early.  
  • What It Is: A revolving line of credit secured by your home, like a credit card.
  • Max Loan to Value (LTV): Up to 65% of your home’s value (as a standalone product). 
  • Interest Rate: Mid-range (variable rate only, tied to prime). 
  • When You Get Funds: Draw funds as you need them, up to your credit limit.
  • Best Used for: Ongoing or unpredictable expenses, like a series of smaller projects or an emergency fund.
  • Key Consideration: Payments can fluctuate as interest rates change. Requires discipline to pay down principal.
  • What It Is: A separate, second loan taken out against your property, in addition to your first mortgage.
  • Max Loan to Value (LTV): Can sometimes exceed 80% LTV, depending on the lender.
  • Interest Rate: High (fixed or variable rates, reflects higher risk).
  • When You Get Funds: One lump sum at closing.
  • Best Used for: Situations where you want to avoid breaking your first mortgage (due to a great rate) or need to borrow more than 80% LTV.
  • Key Consideration: You will have two separate mortgage payments to manage.

Have a goal in mind?

Let’s explore your home’s potential and determine if refinancing is the right strategy to fund it.

Scroll to Top