Second Lien Borrowing Just Hit an 18 Year High and Here Is the Smart Thinking Behind the Surge

July 02, 20263 min read



What the Newest Mortgage Data Is Telling Us About How Homeowners Are Using Their Equity

The brand new Mortgage Monitor just released data that explains exactly what millions of homeowners have quietly been figuring out on their own. Second-lien borrowing just hit an 18-year high with more than half of all equity now being accessed through HELOCs and home equity loans rather than cash-out refinances.

That is not a coincidence. It is a rational and well-reasoned financial decision driven by a specific set of circumstances that a large portion of American homeowners find themselves in right now.

Why Homeowners Are Keeping Their First Mortgage Untouched

The logic is straightforward once you understand the rate situation. Millions of homeowners locked in first mortgage rates at historically low levels during 2020, 2021, and early 2022. Those rates in the two and three percent range represent a financial asset that is genuinely difficult to replace in today's environment.

A cash-out refinance would require giving that rate up entirely. The full loan balance gets replaced with a new mortgage at today's rates and while the cash comes out the monthly payment on the new loan is substantially higher than the one being replaced. For homeowners with large outstanding balances on their low-rate mortgages that trade-off is difficult to justify regardless of how much equity is available.

A HELOC or home equity loan solves the problem entirely. As Mark Osborne explains the low first mortgage stays exactly where it is, untouched and intact. The second lien sits alongside it providing access to the equity that has built up through appreciation and principal paydown without disturbing the rate that makes the existing mortgage so valuable to preserve.

With HELOC rates recently at their most attractive levels since 2022 the cost of accessing equity through a second lien has become meaningfully more reasonable than it was over the past couple of years. The combination of preserved first mortgage rates and improved second lien pricing is what is driving the 18-year high in this borrowing category.

What Homeowners Are Using the Equity For

The applications for accessed home equity are as varied as the homeowners using it. Home improvement projects that add value and reduce deferred maintenance. High-rate debt consolidation that restructures credit card balances carrying double-digit rates into a lower-rate mortgage product. Down payments on investment properties or second homes. College funding. Business capital for self-employed homeowners who find HELOC qualification considerably more accessible than business loan qualification. And emergency reserves that provide a financial cushion without requiring ongoing interest payments unless the line is actually drawn upon.

The HELOC structure is particularly well suited to needs that unfold over time rather than arriving as a single lump sum requirement. You draw what you need when you need it and pay interest only on the amount actually drawn. During periods when the line is not being used the carrying cost is zero.

The Trillions in Equity That Are Sitting Available

American homeowners are sitting on a substantial pool of equity that has accumulated through years of appreciation and principal paydown. That equity is a real financial resource that is available to be put to work toward goals that matter rather than sitting passively in the property until a sale event eventually unlocks it.

For homeowners who locked in low first mortgage rates and have been wondering how to access the equity they have built without giving up the rate that makes their existing mortgage so efficient the answer the data is pointing to is clear. A second lien in the form of a HELOC or home equity loan is the tool that the market has developed specifically for this situation and the 18-year high in second-lien borrowing reflects how many homeowners have figured that out.

Mark Osborne works with homeowners to evaluate their equity position and determine whether a HELOC or home equity loan is the right tool for their specific goals and financial situation. Reach out to Mark Osborne to explore whether tapping your equity through a second lien makes more sense than refinancing your entire mortgage right now.


Sources

MortgageNewsDaily.com
BlackKnightMortgageMonitor.com
FederalReserve.gov
Investopedia.com
BankRate.com

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Mark Osborne

Mark Osborne

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