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Should You Use Your Home Equity to Pay for College in 2026?

Should You Use Your Home Equity to Pay for College in 2026?

April 29, 20267 min read

A Practical Guide for Homeowner Parents Weighing Every Option

If you own a home and you have a college-bound child, you're probably feeling pulled in two directions right now. On one side, you want to help them start without a mountain of debt. On the other, you're looking at your mortgage statement and wondering whether tapping your home equity is smart or a risk you can't afford.

The honest answer: it depends. That's exactly what this guide is designed to help you figure out. Let's walk through what a home equity loan is, how it compares to student loans in 2026, what the real risks look like, and whether this option makes sense for your family.

Where Home Equity Stands in 2026

American homeowners are sitting on record levels of home equity. Years of rising home values have quietly built up a financial asset many families haven't fully considered. If you bought your home 5, 10, or 15 years ago, there's a strong chance you have significant equity built up, even after accounting for your current mortgage balance.

That equity is real money. Right now, as of April 2026, here's what the numbers look like:

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To access your equity, most lenders require that you have at least 15% to 20% of your home's value in equity. Most lenders allow you to borrow against 75% to 80% of your available equity. So as a simple example: on a home worth $500,000 with a $300,000 mortgage balance, you may be eligible to borrow up to around $100,000.

That kind of access to capital can change the college funding conversation entirely.

The College Cost Problem in 2026

College costs continue to climb. The average federal student loan debt is now close to $40,000 per borrower. That number follows graduates for years and often delays major life milestones like buying a home, starting a family, or building retirement savings.

But here's what's truly shifted in 2026: families are finally asking whether it's worth it. That question matters more than how you finance it.

When you compare current home equity rates (mid-7% range) to private student loans (often double digits) or even Federal Parent PLUS loans at 8.94%, the math starts to look different.

Three Ways to Access Your Equity

Option 1: Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC)

A HELOC works like a credit card. You're approved for a maximum amount and draw from it as needed over a set period, typically 10 years. You only pay back what you actually borrow. For college costs—where bills aren't always predictable—this flexibility is a real advantage. Your student may add a study abroad semester, tuition may increase, or room and board costs may shift. A HELOC lets you pull funds as you go. Current average rate: 7.24%.

Option 2: Home Equity Loan

A home equity loan delivers a fixed lump sum at a fixed rate. If you know exactly how much you need, this offers predictable monthly payments from start to finish. This works well for families with a clear, defined funding gap. For example, if your child receives a partial scholarship and you know you need exactly $60,000 over four years, a home equity loan gives you the full amount upfront with a locked rate. Current average rate: 7.37%.

Option 3: Cash-Out Refinance

A cash-out refinance replaces your existing mortgage with a new, larger loan. The difference between the two comes to you in cash. One important caution: if you've already paid down many years on your current mortgage, resetting to a new 30-year loan can cost you more long-term. If you go this route, seriously consider a 15 or 20-year term instead.

The Real Numbers: What This Actually Costs

Let's make this concrete with a real example. Say you have a $50,000 college funding gap:

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Using your equity could save you roughly $33,000 in interest. But that's not the full picture. That savings assumes your income stays stable and you don't face unexpected financial challenges that could put your home at risk.

The Real Risks You Need to Understand

Your home is the collateral for a home equity loan. That's the central fact that changes everything. If your financial situation shifts—if income drops, if unexpected expenses pile up, and you fall behind on payments—your home is at risk.

Federal Student Loans Come with Protections

Federal borrowers may qualify for income-driven repayment plans, deferment during hardship, and in some cases, loan forgiveness programs. When you borrow against your home equity instead, you give up those federal protections in exchange for a lower rate. That trade-off is worth thinking through carefully.

Your Debt-to-Income Ratio Matters

Before moving forward, take a close look at your debt-to-income ratio—the percentage of your gross monthly income that goes toward debt payments. If that ratio is already stretched, adding a home equity loan puts additional strain on your household budget. Most lenders want to see a ratio below 43%. The lower it is, the more comfortable your repayment situation will be.

How to Think About This Decision

Here's the framework I use when talking through this with homeowners:

1. Exhaust Federal Options First

Fill out the FAFSA every year your child is in school. Federal direct loans for students carry lower rates and come with the most protections. Use those first, up to the available limits. Important: home equity in your primary residence doesn't count as an asset on the FAFSA, so borrowing against it won't reduce your child's aid eligibility.

2. Compare Rates Honestly

Look at the actual rate on a home equity loan versus the actual rate on private student loans being offered. Right now, with private loans often in double digits and home equity loans in the mid-7% range, home equity can produce meaningful savings.

3. Look at Your Financial Stability

A home equity loan is a solid tool when your income is stable, your equity cushion is real, and your monthly budget can absorb the new payment without stress. If any one of those three things is uncertain, proceed more carefully.

4. Don't Let Urgency Drive the Decision

College applications, acceptance letters, and tuition bills all come with dates. That pressure is real. But the size of this decision means it deserves a clear-headed review, not a rushed one.

When This Strategy Makes Sense

Use home equity only if:

  • You have strong, stable income

  • You've already maxed out federal aid options

  • You're avoiding high-interest private loans

  • You have a clear, disciplined repayment plan

  • Most importantly: you're not stretching to make this work

When It's a Hard No

Do NOT use home equity if:

  • You're nearing retirement

  • Your income isn't predictable

  • You're already carrying debt stress

  • You haven't explored scholarships, grants, or 529 plans

The Bottom Line

Using home equity for college is not inherently 'good' or 'bad.' It's a leverage decision. And leverage cuts both ways. Done right, it can reduce costs and simplify financing. Done wrong, it can tie your housing security to an uncertain return.

In 2026, the smartest families aren't just asking how to pay for college. They're asking: what's actually worth paying for—and what's not?

About the Author

Michael Vrlaku is a Branch Manager at New American Funding (NMLS #179115) with over 20 years of mortgage industry experience. He operates Mike's Mortgage and REDBO, a flat-fee real estate platform built to help homeowners make smarter financial decisions. You can track current mortgage rates at mymortgageratetracker.com.

This post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or legal advice. Loan terms, rates, and eligibility vary by borrower. Please consult a licensed mortgage professional and your tax advisor before making any borrowing decisions.

Sources Referenced

  • Bankrate, Home Equity Loan Rates, April 2026

  • CBS News, Home Equity and HELOC Rates, April 2026

  • Yahoo Finance / Bankrate, HELOC and Home Equity Loan Rates, April 28, 2026

  • SoFi, HELOC vs Student Loans, February 2026

  • NerdWallet, HELOC vs Student Loans, March 2026

  • New American Funding Learning Center, April 2026

  • Education Data Initiative, Average Student Loan Debt

Michael Vrlaku is a mortgage loan officer with 20 years of experience and over $1 billion in loans funded. He specializes in helping homebuyers with unique situations find creative financing solutions.

Michael Vrlaku

Michael Vrlaku is a mortgage loan officer with 20 years of experience and over $1 billion in loans funded. He specializes in helping homebuyers with unique situations find creative financing solutions.

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