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Cash-Out Refinance Calculator: How Much Can You Get?

Calculate how much cash you can take out when refinancing, compare costs vs benefits, and determine if cash-out refinancing makes sense for you.

Bill McCoy
Updated 3/19/2026
5 min

Cash-Out Refinance Calculator: How Much Can You Get?

Want to tap your home equity? The cash-out calculator shows you exactly how much you can borrow and what it costs.

How Much Cash Can I Take Out?

Maximum cash-out = (Home Value × 80%) - Current Mortgage Balance

Example:

  • Home value: $500,000
  • Current mortgage: $300,000
  • Max cash-out: ($500,000 × 0.80) - $300,000 = $100,000

Use the cash-out calculator →

Step-by-Step: Using the Calculator

Input #1: Current Home Value

How to find it:

  • Recent appraisal
  • Comparable sales in your area (Zillow, Redfin estimates)
  • Ask a realtor for a CMA (Comparative Market Analysis)

Be realistic. If you overestimate, the appraisal will come in low and your loan gets delayed or denied.

Input #2: Current Mortgage Balance

Check your latest mortgage statement. Enter the remaining principal balance (not the original loan amount).

Input #3: Desired Cash Amount

How much do you need? Common uses:

  • Debt consolidation: $50,000-$100,000
  • Home improvements: $30,000-$75,000
  • Investment property down payment: $80,000-$150,000
  • Emergency fund / cash reserves: $20,000-$50,000

Input #4: New Interest Rate

March 2026 cash-out rates: 6.50-7.00% (typically 0.375-0.625% higher than rate-and-term refinance)

Why higher? Cash-out refinance = higher risk for lenders (you're reducing your equity cushion).

Broker's Tip: Cash-out rates are higher, but often still lower than credit cards (22%), personal loans (12-18%), or HELOCs (7-9%). Compare all options.

Calculator Results Explained

1. New Loan Amount

  • Your current balance + cash you're taking out
  • Example: $300,000 balance + $75,000 cash = $375,000 new loan

2. New Monthly Payment

  • Principal + interest on the new loan
  • May be higher or lower than current payment (depends on rate difference)

3. Payment Change

  • How much your payment increases or decreases
  • Example: $2,100 (current) → $2,385 (new) = +$285/month

4. LTV (Loan-to-Value) After Cash-Out

  • New loan ÷ home value
  • Stay under 80% LTV for best rates and no PMI

5. Total Interest Over Loan Term

  • How much interest you'll pay over 30 years
  • Compare this to the cost of alternatives (credit cards, personal loans)

Real Example: Cash-Out Analysis

Your situation:

  • Home value: $600,000
  • Current mortgage: $350,000 at 7.25%
  • Current payment: $2,387/month
  • Want to take out: $100,000 (debt consolidation)

Cash-out refinance offer:

  • New loan: $450,000 at 6.625%
  • New payment: $2,886/month
  • Payment increase: $499/month

Is it worth it?

You're paying off:

  • Credit cards: $60,000 at 22% ($1,320/month minimum)
  • Personal loan: $40,000 at 14% ($930/month)
  • Total current debt payments: $2,250/month

After cash-out refi:

  • New mortgage payment: $2,886 (up $499)
  • Old debt payments: $0 (paid off)
  • Net monthly savings: $1,751

Yes, absolutely worth it. You save $1,751/month and eliminate high-interest debt.

See our cash-out refinance guide for details.

LTV Limits by Loan Type

Conventional:

  • Primary residence: Up to 80% LTV
  • Investment property: Up to 75% LTV
  • Second home: Up to 75% LTV

FHA:

  • Primary residence: Up to 80% LTV

VA:

  • Primary residence: Up to 100% LTV (veterans only)

Broker's Tip: Stay at 80% LTV or below to avoid PMI and get the best rates. Going to 85-90% LTV will cost you 0.5-1% in rate.

Cost vs Benefit Analysis

Good reasons to cash out:

  1. Pay off high-interest debt (credit cards 18-25%, personal loans 10-15%)
  2. Home improvements that increase value (kitchen, bathrooms, addition)
  3. Investment property down payment (rental income covers the higher payment)
  4. Consolidate multiple loans into one payment

Bad reasons to cash out:

  1. Vacations, cars, luxury purchases (you're borrowing against your home for depreciating assets)
  2. Lifestyle creep (living beyond your means)
  3. Gambling, speculation, high-risk investments

Rule of thumb: Only cash out if the money will make you more money (investments, rental property) OR save you money (debt consolidation, home value increase).

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How much equity do I need for cash-out refinance?

20% minimum. If you have less, you can't access cash (and you'll pay PMI).

Q: Can I take out more than 80% of my home's value?

Technically yes (some lenders go to 90-95%), but rates are much higher and you'll pay PMI.

Q: Will cash-out refinance hurt my credit?

Short-term, yes (5-10 point dip from the inquiry). Long-term, no — especially if you're using it to pay off credit cards (improves utilization ratio).

Q: Can I use cash-out for anything?

Yes. Lenders don't restrict how you use the money. But use it wisely — you're borrowing against your home.

Q: What if my home value hasn't increased?

If you bought recently or your home value dropped, you might not have enough equity to cash out. Improve your home, wait for appreciation, or pay down principal.

Next Steps

Calculate your cash-out amount:

Use the cash-out calculator →

Want personalized cash-out analysis?

Get your free quote →

I'm a California licensed mortgage broker with 15+ years experience (DRE #01212512).

Related guides:

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About the Author

Bill McCoy

Bill is a licensed mortgage broker with over 15 years of experience helping homeowners save money through refinancing. He specializes in analyzing market trends and finding the best loan options for each client's unique situation.

CA DRE #01212512 | NMLS #[number]