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Second Lien vs First Lien Refinance Decision Tool

Second lien (HELOC) vs first lien (cash-out refinance) - understand the difference and choose wisely.

#Second Lien#First Lien#HELOC#Refinance

Second Lien vs. First Lien: What’s the Difference?

The lien position matters—a lot. Here’s what second lien (HELOC) vs. first lien (cash-out refinance) means for you.

TL;DR: Second lien (HELOC) keeps your first mortgage intact with low closing costs (~$750) but higher rates. First lien (cash-out refinance) replaces your mortgage with lower rates but higher closing costs ($10,000+) and term reset. Choose second lien to preserve a low first mortgage rate; choose first lien for the lowest overall rate on large amounts.

What Is Lien Position?

First lien: Primary mortgage - gets paid first if home is sold Second lien: HELOC or home equity loan - gets paid after first mortgage

Comparison Table

FactorFirst Lien (Refinance)Second Lien (HELOC)
Position#1 in line#2 in line
Closing CostsHigh ($10k+)Low (~$750)
RateLowerHigher
Risk to LenderLowerHigher
Keeps First MortgageNoYes

Why Second Liens Cost More

Second lien lenders take more risk:

  • If home sells, first mortgage gets paid first
  • Second lien might not get fully repaid
  • Higher risk = higher rate

Typical rate spread: 1-2% higher than first mortgage

When Each Makes Sense

First Lien (Cash-Out Refinance):

  • You want lowest possible rate
  • Large borrowing amount ($75k+)
  • Staying in home 10+ years
  • Refinance rate is competitive

Second Lien (HELOC):

  • You love your first mortgage rate
  • Need flexibility (ongoing access)
  • Might move within 5 years
  • Smaller borrowing amount

Combined LTV Limits

Lenders care about combined loan-to-value (CLTV):

Loan TypeMax CLTV
First lien only80-97%
Second lien (under 80% CLTV)Easier approval
Second lien (80-85% CLTV)Harder but possible
Second lien (85%+ CLTV)Very difficult

Example:

  • Home: $400,000
  • First mortgage: $280,000 (70% LTV)
  • HELOC available: Up to $40,000 (to reach 80% CLTV)

Our Calculator Considers Both

We show:

  • HELOC (second lien) payment and costs
  • Cash-out refinance (first lien) payment and costs
  • Total cost comparison over 10 years
  • Which wins based on your timeline

The “Subordination” Option

Can you keep first mortgage AND add a second lien?

Yes, through subordination:

  • First lender agrees to remain in first position
  • HELOC becomes second lien
  • Requires first lender approval
  • Depends on your LTV and payment history

Frequently Asked Questions

What’s the difference between first and second lien?

A first lien (primary mortgage) gets paid first if the home is sold. A second lien (HELOC or home equity loan) gets paid after the first mortgage. Second liens have higher rates because lenders take more risk—they’re second in line for repayment.

Why are HELOC rates higher than first mortgage rates?

HELOCs are second liens, meaning if the home is foreclosed, the first mortgage gets paid first. HELOC lenders may not recover their full investment, so they charge 1-2% more than first mortgage rates to compensate for this risk.

Should I choose HELOC or cash-out refinance based on lien position?

Choose HELOC (second lien) if you have a low first mortgage rate you want to keep. Choose cash-out refinance (first lien) if you want the lowest possible rate and don’t mind replacing your current mortgage. Use our calculator to compare total costs.

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