Mortgage vs Home Equity Loan vs HELOC: Which Is Right for You?
Updated
Mortgage, home equity loan, HELOC — all three are secured by your home, but they work very differently. Here’s a comprehensive comparison to help you decide which product fits your situation.
The quick comparison
Feature
First Mortgage
Home Equity Loan (HEL)
HELOC
Purpose
Purchase or refinance a home
Borrow against existing equity (lump sum)
Borrow against existing equity (revolving)
Disbursement
Lump sum at purchase/refinance
Lump sum
Draw as needed, repay, draw again
Rate type
Fixed or variable
Fixed (usually)
Variable (prime + spread)
Typical rate (2026)
4.00%–5.50%
6.00%–8.50%
Prime + 0.50% to prime + 2.00%
Payment structure
Principal + interest (amortized)
Principal + interest (amortized)
Interest-only minimum
Max LTV
95% (insured) / 80% (uninsured)
80% combined
65% standalone / 80% combined
Title position
First charge
Second charge (usually)
First or second charge
Term
1–10 years (25-yr amortization)
1–10 years (fully amortized)
Revolving (no set term)
Prepayment
Limited (penalties apply)
Usually more flexible
Fully open — repay anytime
How they work — side by side
First mortgage
You borrow money to buy a home. The loan is amortized over 25 years (or 30 for insured first-time buyers under 2024+ rules), but the interest rate is locked for a term of typically 1–5 years. At the end of each term, you renew at current rates.
Cash flow: Fixed monthly payments that cover both principal and interest. Payments stay the same for the entire term (fixed rate) or fluctuate with prime (variable rate).
Home equity loan
You’ve already bought a home and built equity. You borrow a specific amount against that equity in a single lump sum. You repay in fixed monthly installments over the loan term — there’s no renewal; you pay it off completely by the end of the term.
Cash flow: Fixed monthly payments, fully amortized. Predictable from day one.
HELOC
You’ve built equity and want flexible access. A HELOC acts like a credit card secured by your home — you can draw funds, repay, and draw again up to your credit limit. The minimum payment is usually interest-only.
Cash flow: Variable. You only pay interest on what you’ve drawn. Minimum payments fluctuate with prime rate changes.
Rate comparison in detail
Product
Rate Basis
Current Range (2026)
Payment on $100K
5-year fixed mortgage
Market bond yields
4.09%–4.69%
$543–$567/mo (25-yr am)
Variable mortgage
Prime – discount
4.45%–5.20%
$553–$583/mo (25-yr am)
Home equity loan
Fixed, second-position pricing
6.00%–8.50%
$1,135–$1,254/mo (10-yr)
HELOC
Prime + spread
5.45%–7.00%
$454–$583/mo (interest only)
Key insight: The HELOC minimum payment looks lowest, but that’s because it’s interest-only — you’re not paying down the principal. Over time, a HELOC costs more if you only make minimum payments.
Total interest cost: $100,000 over 10 years
Product
Assumption
Total Interest Paid
Total Payments
Mortgage (first position)
4.50% fixed, 25-yr am
~$26,000 (first 10 yrs)
~$126,000
Home equity loan
7.00% fixed, 10-yr am
~$39,500
~$139,500
HELOC (interest only)
6.00% variable, never repay principal
~$60,000
~$160,000
HELOC (aggressive repayment)
6.00% variable, $1,200/mo
~$23,500
~$123,500
The HELOC can be the cheapest or most expensive option — it depends entirely on your repayment discipline.
HELOC is often cheapest to set up — many banks waive all fees when setting up a HELOC, especially as part of a readvanceable mortgage.
Ongoing costs
Cost
First Mortgage
Home Equity Loan
HELOC
Annual fee
None
None
$0–$100/year (some lenders)
Penalty for early repayment
IRD or 3-month interest
Usually 3-month interest
None (fully open)
Discharge fee
$200–$400
$200–$400
Included in mortgage discharge
Readvanceable mortgages: the hybrid option
A readvanceable mortgage combines a regular mortgage with a HELOC under one registered charge. As you pay down mortgage principal, that amount automatically becomes available in your HELOC.