How to Use a HELOC to Consolidate High-Interest Debt This Year


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How to Use a HELOC to Consolidate High-Interest Debt This Year

📅 17 March 2026
⏱ 11 min read
🌍 USA · UK · Canada · Australia
7–10%
Typical HELOC rate (USA)

21–29%
Average credit card APR (USA)

$460
Monthly saving on $35K example

$4,500
Annual interest saving (example)

5
Key risks to understand first

If you are carrying high-interest debt — credit cards at 20% to 29% APR, personal loans at 15% or more — and you own a home with equity built up, you may be sitting on one of the most powerful debt consolidation tools available. A Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) allows homeowners to borrow against their property equity at rates typically between 7% and 10% — a fraction of what credit cards charge.

Used correctly, a HELOC can reduce your monthly interest burden dramatically, simplify multiple debts into one payment, and potentially save you tens of thousands of dollars. But used incorrectly, it can put your home at risk. This guide covers everything you need to know — including jurisdiction-specific details for the USA, UK, Canada, and Australia. If you are also looking at other debt solutions, see our guide comparing debt consolidation loans vs credit counseling.

⚠ Read This First

A HELOC converts unsecured debt (credit cards) into secured debt backed by your home. Default on a HELOC and you risk losing your property. This is the most important fact in this article. Everything else depends on whether you can manage this risk responsibly.

▶ Watch the full guide — How to Use a HELOC to Consolidate High-Interest Debt This Year

What Is a HELOC?

A Home Equity Line of Credit is a revolving credit line secured against your home equity. Your equity is the difference between your property’s current market value and your outstanding mortgage balance.

Example: home worth $400,000 — mortgage balance $250,000 — equity = $150,000.

A HELOC lets you borrow a percentage of that equity as a flexible line you draw from as needed. In the US it works in two phases: a draw period (typically 10 years — borrow and repay, interest only) followed by a repayment period (10–20 years — principal plus interest).

📌 Equivalent Products by Country

UK: Further advance or secured loan against your property
Canada: Home equity loan or HELOC (one of the most developed markets globally)
Australia: Redraw facility on your mortgage or home equity loan

How Much Can You Borrow? — By Country

USA
LTV limit80–85% of home value
Formula(Value × 80%) − Mortgage
Example$400K × 80% − $250K = $70K
Min credit score620 (700+ for best rates)

Canada
Standalone HELOCMax 65% LTV
Combined mortgage + HELOCMax 80% LTV
Min credit scoreApprox 650
Top lendersRBC, TD, Scotiabank

Australia
Standard LTVUp to 80%
With LMIUp to 90%
Best first stepContact your existing lender
Product nameRedraw facility / home equity loan

United Kingdom
LTV for further advance75–85%
Best first stepYour existing mortgage lender
AlternativeSecond charge / secured loan
TipUse a whole-of-market broker

Interest Rate Comparison — All Four Countries

CountryHELOC / Secured RateCredit CardsPersonal LoansSaving
USA7–10% variable21–29%11–24%~14–19% saved
Canada6–8% variable19.99% fixed9–20%~12–14% saved
Australia6–8.5% variable17–22%8–20%~10–14% saved
UK6–10% variable21–30%7–24%~12–20% saved

Real Numbers: Before and After HELOC Consolidation

Example: $35,000 in High-Interest Debt Consolidated at 8.5% HELOC

Credit Card 1 — $15,000 at 24% APR
$375/month minimum
Credit Card 2 — $12,000 at 22% APR
$300/month minimum
Personal Loan — $8,000 at 16% APR
$220/month
Total monthly payments (before)
$895/month
Total annual interest cost (before)
~$7,200/year
HELOC — $35,000 at 8.5% over 10 years
~$435/month
Annual interest cost (after — year 1)
~$2,700/year
Monthly saving
$460/month
Annual interest saving
~$4,500/year

⚠ Critical Warning

This saving only holds if you do not re-accumulate debt on the paid-off cards. If you run the cards back up, you now have HELOC debt plus new card debt — significantly worse than your starting position. This is the number one reason the strategy fails.

Who Is This Strategy Right For?

All five of the following criteria must apply:

  • Meaningful home equity — at least 20% remaining after the HELOC is added
  • Stable, reliable income — ability to repay over the full term, not just interest-only minimums
  • Root cause of debt addressed — a realistic plan not to re-accumulate card debt
  • Strong credit score — 620+ in the US, 650+ in Canada, good score in Australia and UK
  • Full acceptance of home-as-collateral risk — income drop or property value fall creates real danger

Not suitable for: people whose debt was caused by overspending habits that have not changed, those with unstable employment, or those with very little equity buffer remaining.

The 5 Risks You Must Understand

Risk 1 — Your Home Is Now Collateral
Credit card debt is unsecured — the lender cannot take your home if you default. A HELOC is secured against your property. Default and you risk foreclosure or repossession.

Risk 2 — Variable Interest Rates
Most HELOCs track a benchmark rate (US prime rate, Bank of England base rate). If central banks raise rates significantly, your HELOC payment rises and can eliminate the savings advantage.

Risk 3 — The Re-Accumulation Trap
Studies show a significant percentage of people re-accumulate card debt within 2–3 years of consolidating. You then have both HELOC debt and new card debt — worse than the starting position.

Risk 4 — Reduced Home Equity Buffer
Drawing equity reduces your financial buffer in the property. If property values fall, your mortgage and HELOC combined could exceed your home’s value — negative equity.

Risk 5 — Fees and Closing Costs
US HELOCs: $200–$500+ in closing costs. UK: arrangement and valuation fees. Australia and Canada: application fees. These must be factored into the total savings calculation.

HELOC vs. Other Debt Consolidation Options

OptionRateHome at RiskBest For
HELOC (secured)7–10%YesHomeowners with equity, stable income, strong discipline
Personal loan (unsecured)8–20%NoNo home equity or unwilling to risk property
Balance transfer card0% then 20%+NoSmaller debts payable in full within 12–21 months
Debt management planNegotiatedNoIncome difficulty — structured plan via nonprofit
Cash-out refinance (USA)Mortgage rateYesUS homeowners — replaces mortgage, lump sum

For a deeper look at unsecured alternatives, see our guide: Debt Consolidation Loans vs. Credit Counseling — Which Saves You More?

Step-by-Step: How to Do It Correctly

  1. Calculate your equity. Check your mortgage balance and get a current property value estimate. Apply your country’s LTV formula to find your maximum available amount.
  2. Check your credit score. USA: AnnualCreditReport.com (aim for 700+). Canada: Equifax or TransUnion. Australia/UK: free statutory bureau reports.
  3. Get at least 3 quotes. Start with your existing mortgage lender — they already know your property. Use a whole-of-market broker in the UK and Australia.
  4. Calculate total savings including all fees. The interest differential must outweigh all closing costs, arrangement fees, and valuation costs.
  5. Pay off debts directly — immediately. Do not let HELOC cash sit in your account. Pay the high-interest accounts the same day the funds arrive.
  6. Close or reduce credit card limits. Remove the temptation to re-accumulate debt immediately after consolidation.
  7. Set up automatic payments above the minimum. Pay principal — not just interest. Reducing the balance faster saves significantly more over the term.

🏠 HELOC Savings Estimator

Enter your current debt and a HELOC rate to estimate your potential monthly saving.





Your Results — Enter Details Above

ItemAmount
Current annual interest cost
HELOC monthly payment
HELOC annual interest (year 1)
Annual interest saving

Enter your details above and click Calculate

* Estimates only. Does not include closing costs or fees. Consult a qualified financial professional before proceeding.

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Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. HELOC rates, LTV limits, and product availability vary by lender and are subject to change. Using your home as collateral involves significant risk including potential loss of your property. Always consult a qualified financial or mortgage professional before making any decisions. This article does not constitute a recommendation to take out any specific financial product.

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