I include the equity of my primary residence in my net worth and capital allocation calculations because we are stewards of all of our wealth, not just some of it. Some examples I see or hear of on a daily basis, where you would be a fool not to consider or utilize your home's equity:
Scenario 1:You own 100 year old home that is falling apart in a post-gentrification neighborhood. Great location, but you live in squalor and will for the rest of your life (until your children or grandchildren sell after you die). But there is an alternative. You could sell today for lot value (let's say $500-600,000), move to a nice suburb, buy a McMansion with all cash, live in a nice neighborhood with nice schools for your family to attend, and generally have a better life. Better to not consider your equity and keep living in squalor?
Scenario 2:You have $100,000 worth of credit card debt that is racking up at 30% interest that you cannot realistically pay off any time soon. But a HELOC would allow you to temporarily take some equity out of your home at ~7%, which means you can get out of credit card debt and reasonably quickly get the HELOC paid off also. Better to keep the high interest credit card debt?
Scenario 3:You get a once in a lifetime business opportunity that will make you something like a 50% annual return. You are cash strapped at the time, but your home is paid off. Again, you can get a HELOC at 7% interest that will allow you to invest in this new venture and pay off the HELOC in just 2.25 years. Are you going to pass that up? (I returned capital and gains to syndication investors last year with 33% and 100% IRR's, respectively, so yes, this does happen).
Sponsor Message: We Split Commissions. Full Service Agents in Austin, Bryan-College Station, Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston and San Antonio.
Red Pear Realty