Home Renovation Financing: HELOC or Refinance?
Home renovations are one of the most common reasons to tap home equity. Here’s how to choose the right financing.
TL;DR: HELOC is ideal for renovations because you can draw funds as needed for multiple project phases. Low closing costs (~$750) and interest-only payments during draw period keep costs down. Choose cash-out refinance only for large, one-time projects when you want a fixed rate for 10+ years.
Renovation Size Dictates Financing
Small projects ($10,000-$30,000):
- HELOC often wins
- Low closing costs
- Pay as you go
Large projects ($50,000+):
- Could go either way
- Depends on your timeline and rates
Multiple phases:
- HELOC is ideal
- Draw as needed for each phase
HELOC for Renovations
Best for:
- Ongoing/multi-phase projects
- DIY (pay contractors over time)
- Unsure of final cost
- Plan to pay off quickly
Real example:
- Kitchen remodel: $45,000
- HELOC at 8.5%: ~$319/month interest-only
- Pay off over 3 years: ~$1,420/month
Cash-Out Refinance for Renovations
Best for:
- Large, one-time projects
- Full gut renovation
- Refinance rate is excellent
- Staying in home 10+ years
Real example:
- Major renovation: $100,000
- Refinance $400,000 at 6.5%
- Single payment, fixed rate
ROI Matters
Does the renovation add value?
| Project | Typical ROI | Financing Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Kitchen remodel | 70-80% | Smaller loan = HELOC OK |
| Bathroom remodel | 60-70% | HELOC usually fine |
| Deck/patio | 60-75% | Keep loan amount low |
| Pool | 40-60% | Consider carefully |
| Roof replacement | 60-70% | Necessary, value-protecting |
Our Calculator for Renovations
Input:
- Project budget
- Your mortgage details
- Expected timeline
Get:
- Monthly payment comparison
- Break-even analysis
- Total interest cost
Renovation Financing Tips
- Get contractor quotes first - Know exactly what you need
- Add 10-20% buffer - Projects often run over
- Consider timing - Rates may change
- Check if renovation increases home value - Affects LTV and refinancing ability
Frequently Asked Questions
Is HELOC or cash-out refinance better for home renovations?
HELOC is usually better for renovations because you can draw funds as needed for multiple phases, pay interest-only during the project, and keep closing costs low (~$750). Cash-out refinance makes sense for large, one-time projects when you want a fixed rate and plan to stay 10+ years.
How does a HELOC work for multi-phase renovations?
You draw what you need for each phase—foundation, framing, finishes—rather than taking all funds upfront. This saves interest since you only pay on what you’ve drawn. A $45,000 kitchen remodel done in phases might only need $30,000 average balance, saving ~$1,000/year in interest.
Should I consider a renovation loan instead?
FHA 203(k) and Fannie Mae HomeStyle renovation loans are options, but they’re complex and have higher fees. For most homeowners, a HELOC provides similar benefits with less paperwork and lower costs. Compare all options using our calculator.