Turn home equity into cash at 6.5-6.875% rates. Learn LTV limits, requirements, best uses for funds, and tax implications. Get your free quote today.
A cash-out refinance lets you borrow against your home equity and pocket the difference in cash.
Simple example: You owe $200,000 on a home worth $400,000. You refinance for $300,000. The new loan pays off the old $200,000 mortgage, and you get $100,000 cash (minus closing costs).
In my 15 years as a California mortgage broker, I've helped hundreds of homeowners tap their equity for renovations, debt consolidation, investments, and business funding.
Cash-out refinancing is one of the cheapest ways to borrow large amounts of money. But it's not right for every situation.
Here's exactly how it works, what you can borrow, current rates, and when it makes sense (and when it doesn't).
You're replacing your existing mortgage with a new, larger mortgage. The difference goes to you in cash.
Step-by-step:
Your home is appraised. The lender needs to know the current market value.
You choose your new loan amount. Based on your home's value and the lender's LTV limits, you decide how much to borrow.
The new loan pays off your old mortgage. If you owe $250,000 and your new loan is $350,000, the lender pays off the $250,000 balance.
You receive the difference. $350,000 - $250,000 = $100,000 cash (minus closing costs, which typically run $7,000-$12,000 depending on loan size).
You start making payments on the new loan. Your new monthly payment will be higher because you've borrowed more money.
Broker's Tip: The cash is wired to your bank account or you receive a check at closing. You don't have to tell the lender what you're using the money for (unless it's investment property—then they care). But choosing smart uses for the cash is critical.
Lenders limit how much you can cash out based on your home's value. This is called the loan-to-value ratio (LTV).
LTV = New loan amount ÷ Home value
You can borrow up to 80% of your home's value. You must leave 20% equity in the home.
Example:
FHA allows 85% LTV, meaning you only need 15% equity remaining.
Same home:
But: FHA loans require mortgage insurance (both upfront and monthly), which increases your total cost. Only use FHA cash-out if your credit score is too low for conventional (under 620) or you need that extra 5% LTV.
If you're a veteran, you can drain all your equity—up to 100% LTV.
Same home:
This is the most generous cash-out option available. You pay a VA funding fee (2.3% for first use, 3.6% for subsequent use), but there's no monthly mortgage insurance.
Read the full VA guide: VA IRRRL Streamline Refinance: The Complete 2026 Guide.
Broker's Tip: Even though VA allows 100% LTV, most borrowers should leave some equity cushion. If home values drop and you're at 100% LTV, you'll be underwater immediately.
Cash-out refinance rates run 0.25% to 0.50% higher than standard rate-and-term refinances.
Current rates:
Your actual rate depends on:
Real numbers: $350,000 cash-out refinance at 6.75%
Compare that to a credit card cash advance at 24% APR or a personal loan at 12%, and you see why cash-out refinancing is one of the cheapest ways to access large sums.
See current rates across all loan types in What Is Refinancing? Your Complete Guide for 2026.
Lenders have stricter requirements for cash-out refinances than standard refinances.
You need enough equity to meet the LTV limits:
DTI = Total monthly debts ÷ Gross monthly income
Example:
Total debts: $3,400 DTI: $3,400 ÷ $10,000 = 34% ✅ Approved
Most lenders require you to have owned the home and had the mortgage for at least 6 months before doing a cash-out refinance.
Some lenders require 12 months of seasoning.
Why: Prevents "cash-out flipping" schemes where someone buys a house, immediately refinances for more than they paid, and pockets the difference.
The home must appraise at or above your target value. If you think your home is worth $500,000 but it appraises at $450,000, your max cash-out drops by $50,000.
Appraisal cost: $500-$700
Appraisal timeline: 7-14 days from order to report
You'll get the best rates on a primary residence.
Investment properties and second homes have higher rates (add 0.5% to 1.0%) and stricter LTV limits (usually 70%-75% max LTV).
Broker's Tip: If you're doing a large cash-out, consider ordering a pre-appraisal before applying. For $500, you'll know if your home value supports the loan amount you want. If it appraises low, you can decide whether to proceed or wait.
Not all uses of cash-out funds are created equal. Here's my take after 15 years in the business:
1. Home Improvements That Add Value
Kitchen remodel, bathroom upgrades, adding square footage, new roof, HVAC replacement.
Why it's smart: You're borrowing at 6.75% and increasing your home's value. A $50,000 kitchen remodel might add $60,000-$70,000 to your home's value (and makes it easier to sell later).
2. High-Interest Debt Consolidation
Paying off credit cards at 20%-24% APR with a 6.75% mortgage is a no-brainer—if you won't run up the cards again.
Example:
Warning: If you consolidate debt and then max out your credit cards again, you've just made things worse. You now have the mortgage debt AND new credit card debt.
3. Rental Property Down Payment
Borrow against your primary residence at 6.75% to put 25% down on a rental property that cash flows. If the rental generates 8%-12% returns, you're arbitraging the spread.
4. Business Investment
Starting or expanding a business that generates higher returns than your mortgage rate.
5. Major Medical Expenses
If you're facing $100,000+ in medical bills, a cash-out refinance at 6.75% beats medical payment plans at 10%-15% or credit cards at 24%.
1. Vacations, Cars, or Depreciating Assets
Don't borrow against your house to take a $30,000 vacation. You'll be paying for that trip for 30 years at 6.75% interest. Total cost: $73,000+.
2. Risky Investments
Don't cash out equity to day-trade stocks or buy crypto. If the investment tanks, you're stuck with a bigger mortgage and nothing to show for it.
3. Lifestyle Inflation
Using cash-out money to "live large" for a year while you're between jobs or underemployed is a terrible idea. You're kicking the can down the road.
4. Paying Off Low-Interest Debt
If you have a car loan at 3.5%, don't pay it off with a cash-out refi at 6.75%. You're making your total borrowing cost worse.
Broker's Tip: Before you cash out, ask yourself: "Will this improve my financial situation in 5 years?" If the answer is no, don't do it.
You have three ways to tap your home equity. Here's how they compare:
| Feature | Cash-Out Refinance | HELOC | Home Equity Loan | |---------|-------------------|-------|------------------| | How it works | Replaces your mortgage with a bigger one | Line of credit, draw as needed | Second mortgage, lump sum | | Current rate (2026) | 6.50% - 6.875% fixed | 8.5% - 10% variable | 8.0% - 9.5% fixed | | Amount you can borrow | Up to 80% LTV (conventional) | Up to 85% CLTV | Up to 85% CLTV | | Closing costs | $7,000 - $12,000 (2%-3% of loan) | $0 - $500 | $2,000 - $5,000 | | Monthly payment | One payment (new mortgage) | Interest-only during draw period, then P&I | Fixed P&I payment | | Best for | Large lump sum, refinancing anyway | Ongoing access to funds, uncertain amount | Fixed lump sum, keeping current mortgage |
When to use cash-out refi instead of HELOC:
When to use HELOC instead of cash-out refi:
When to use home equity loan:
In March 2026, with first mortgage rates at 6.5% and HELOC rates at 9%+, cash-out refinancing is often the cheapest option.
Cash you receive is NOT taxable income. It's a loan. You don't pay taxes on borrowed money.
Mortgage interest deduction:
You can deduct mortgage interest on up to $750,000 of mortgage debt if you use the cash-out funds to "buy, build, or substantially improve" your home.
What qualifies:
What doesn't qualify:
If you use the cash-out funds for non-home-improvement purposes, that portion of your mortgage interest is not deductible under current tax law (Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017).
Example:
Only the interest on the $60,000 used for home improvement is deductible.
Broker's Tip: Keep receipts for all home improvements funded by cash-out refinancing. If the IRS audits you, you'll need proof the money went to qualifying expenses.
I'm not a tax advisor. Talk to a CPA about your specific situation.
Timeline: 30-45 days from application to closing.
Cash-out refinances take slightly longer than standard refinances because:
Breakdown:
See the full timeline breakdown in How to Refinance Your Mortgage: Step-by-Step Guide.
Expect to pay 2% to 3% of your new loan amount in closing costs.
Typical costs on a $400,000 cash-out refinance:
Total: $8,000 - $12,000
You can either:
Example: $400,000 cash-out refi
Read the full breakdown in Refinance Closing Costs: What You'll Pay in 2026.
Yes, but your rate will be higher. FHA allows scores as low as 580. Conventional typically needs 620+. Expect to pay 1%-2% higher than advertised rates if your score is under 680.
See Credit Score Requirements for Refinancing in 2026 for rate tiers.
Most lenders require 6-12 months of ownership before approving a cash-out refinance.
Only with a VA loan. Conventional maxes at 80% LTV, FHA at 85%.
Depends. If you're replacing 7%+ debt with a 6.75% mortgage, yes. If you're cashing out to splurge on non-essentials, no.
Run the numbers on what you're using the money for. Make sure the return (financial or otherwise) justifies the cost.
Rate-and-term: You're changing your rate or term but not your loan balance (except for rolling in closing costs).
Cash-out: You're increasing your loan balance and taking the difference in cash.
Lenders charge higher rates for cash-out because it's riskier—you're taking equity out of the property.
No. The cash you receive is a loan, not income. You only pay capital gains when you sell the home.
Yes. Many real estate investors do this—cash out equity on their primary residence to fund a down payment on a rental property.
Just make sure your DTI can handle both mortgage payments.
Here's my framework:
Do it if:
Don't do it if:
When in doubt, calculate the total cost of the cash over 30 years:
$50,000 cash-out at 6.75% over 30 years = $115,000 total cost (principal + interest)
Ask yourself: "Is what I'm buying worth $115,000?" If not, find another funding source.
If a cash-out refinance makes sense for your situation:
Step 1: Calculate how much equity you have. Home value - mortgage balance = equity.
Step 2: Determine how much you need. Don't borrow more than necessary.
Step 3: Check your credit score. If it's under 680, spend a month improving it first.
Step 4: Shop at least 3 lenders for cash-out refi quotes.
Step 5: Compare the cash-out option against a HELOC or home equity loan to make sure you're choosing the cheapest path.
Want a broker to shop rates for you? Get your free quote at refinancerate.com — we'll compare 20+ lenders and find you the best cash-out refinance rate for your situation.
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Licensed mortgage broker with 15+ years of experience helping homeowners save money through refinancing. CA DRE #01212512.