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Home Loan Refinance Education

There's always a someday. Someday, I'll improve my less-than-perfect credit. Someday, I'll have all my loans paid off. Someday, I can use my home to my financial advantage. Sound familiar?

You took the first step in securing your financial future when you invested in your home. Now, you can put the equity of your home to work for you.

Don’t wait for someday…use your home to help you reach your financial goals!


Why Refinance Your Home Loan?

You may be able to refinance your home loan and get back in control of your finances.

  • Improve the terms of your home loan.
  • Use the equity you've built to consolidate other high-interest rate loans.


Refinancing is when you apply for a new home loan to pay off your current home loan. Even if you have less than perfect credit, your home may provide you with several financial advantages, including:


One Monthly Loan Payment

Simplify your life! You may be able to consolidate multiple bills into one loan. One loan means one bill, one due date to remember and one check to write.


Restructure Other Bills

Do you have existing loans or credit card balances with high interest rates? If so, you may want to consider combining those obligations into a new home loan. Even if you have less than perfect credit, this may be the option for you.


Convert To A Fixed-Rate Mortgage

With a fixed-rate mortgage, you can have the security of knowing that your monthly principal and interest payment will remain steady, regardless of the current market environment. This loan option is attractive to many homeowners because of its predictability.


Get Cash In Hand

One way to put more money in your pocket is to tap into the equity you've built in your home with a cash-out home loan refinance. If you have sufficient equity in your home, you can refinance the existing loan secured by your home and take the extra funds as cash. This can provide money for remodeling your home, making a large purchase, such as a car or boat, or taking the vacation of your dreams.


Refinance Home Loans From Wells Fargo Financial

When you refinance your home loan with Wells Fargo Financial, you can choose payment terms that will keep your monthly payments at a comfortable level. You can choose from a range of loan repayment periods to meet your needs. Best of all, the interest you pay on loans leveraging your home may be tax deductible.


Home Loan Education

Many say your home is the wisest investment you'll make. Historically, it's an asset you can count on during difficult times, and it's something you can pass on to your family.

Your home is a financial tool; you build equity as you pay your loan and as the value increases in favorable market conditions.


Unlock Your Home's Equity With Wells Fargo Financial

Refinancing your home loan can help you free up your budget by taking advantage of the equity you've built. For many homeowners, it's a great way to restructure high-interest bills and thereby reduce your current monthly payments.

You could free up extra money each month to spend however you’d like. Or, you may choose to get cash out to pay for your immediate financing needs. With home loans, the interest you pay may be tax deductible.


What Is A Mortgage Loan?

A Mortgage is a document that gives a lender an interest in real property. It provides the lender assurances that you’ll honor your promise to repay the money you’ve borrowed. Your promise to repay is found in the written instrument known as the Note. Together, a Mortgage and Note are often simply referred to as a mortgage loan.

Mortgage loans come in many different shapes and sizes, all with their own advantages and disadvantages. It is important to learn about all the mortgage loan options available, so you can select the one that’s right for you, your financial situation and your personal goals.

Wells Fargo Financial offers Fixed-Rate Mortgage Loans for individuals interested in refinancing.


Fixed-Rate Mortgage Loans


Fixed-rate mortgages offer predictable monthly principal and interest payments throughout the life of the loan and give protection from rising interest rates. They work well for those with a fixed or slowly-increasing income and have a lower tolerance for financial risk. Fixed-rate mortgages are generally well-suited for borrowers who plan to stay in their home for a longer period of time. Fixed-rate mortgages are often considered more conservative and can give you the security of knowing your monthly principal and interest payment will not change over the life of your loan.

How To Access The Equity In Your Home

You've probably heard about home equity loans, but what about a 100 percent home equity loan? Wells Fargo Financial does not offer 100% or 125% home equity loans. The purpose of this page is to provide information and education on a financial concept.

It's one way to free up resources from your home. Another way is to simply refinance your current mortgage. Either route you choose, you may be able to tap into the equity that you've accumulated.


Home Equity Loan Works

To begin, all lenders establish a maximum loan-to-value (LTV) ratio (i.e. all outstanding loan amounts divided by the home's appraised value). For example, a lender that establishes a maximum LTV of 80 percent would allow $80,000 to be borrowed if the appraised home value is $100,000 (80,000/100,00 = 80% LTV).

With a 100 percent home equity loan, you actually borrow 100 percent of your home's value (e.g. $100,000/$100,000 = 100% LTV).

Under the above example with $80,000 in existing loan amounts, the borrower could access $20,000 of equity; the difference between the appraised home value and the amount of the outstanding loans.

Simply stated, a 100 percent home equity loan means you open an additional loan or line of credit accessing your home's equity. The home equity loan or credit line combined with your current mortgage balance totals 100 percent of your home's value, and you end up with more than one loan.

For example, if your home's value totals $100,000 and your loan balances equal $80,000, you could open a $20,000 home equity loan or line of credit.


Mortgage Refinance

While the difference is subtle, a mortgage refinance works a little differently.You still access the equity in your home, but you're getting to it in a slightly different way. With a refinance, you replace your existing loan with a new loan and ask for an additional amount (equal to the equity value) which is added to the new loan. With a refinance equal to 100 percent of the home's value, you end up with one loan instead of multiple loans.

For example,shows let's say Jackie and Robert want to update their kitchen. They decide to refinance their current mortgage and access some equity to help cover the costs.


First, they need to consider how much they still owe on their current home loan. Their current mortgage balance is $80,000, and an appraisal values their home at $100,000. They could refinance 100 percent of their home's value and use what's left ($20,000) to help with remodeling costs.

Learn more about the basics of mortgage lending.


Should You Access Your Home's Value?

There isn't a right or wrong answer. However, borrowing 100 percent of your home's value may offer you greater benefits than other options.

A 100 percent home equity loan or 100 percent mortgage refinance may provide:

  • Larger Amount Of Credit
    Borrowing 100 percent of your home's value may mean access to more funds than from another source
    (i.e. credit card).

  • Lower Rates
    Typically, loans secured by a home have lower interest rates than credit cards or other unsecured personal loans.

  • Tax Deductibility1
    Generally, the interest on a home equity loan may be tax deductible; whereas, there may be no tax benefits for most personal loans.

Home Equity Loan Options

Some lenders allow homeowners to borrow more than the value of their home…more than 100 percent LTV.

There are some lenders that offer 125 percent home equity loan products. That allows borrowers to access 25 percent more than their home's appraised value.

While a 125 percent home equity loan works similarly to a 100 percent home equity loan, there are a few considerations.


Home Equity Loan Advantages

  • You can use a 125 percent home equity loan to consolidate high interest rate credit cards or other loans.
  • A 125 percent home equity loan offers the borrower another refinancing option.
  • A 125 percent home equity loan offers the borrower more likelihood for cash out if the first mortgage balance is high.

Home Equity Loan Risks

  • Higher LTV ratios often mean higher interest rates for the borrower.
  • Higher interest rates could translate into a hefty monthly house payment.
  • IRS regulations won't allow a tax deduction on any part of a home equity loan that exceeds the home's fair market value (100 percent).
  • If you plan to sell your house, you may have to come up with more money at closing because you have borrowed more than your home is worth. In other words, if you don't sell your home for more than 125 percent of its value, the equity you may have used for a down payment on a new home could be tapped out.
  • Some lenders won't offer 125 percent home equity loans as a second mortgage.

Using Your Home Equity Wisely

Experts don't recommend tapping into your home equity for just anything. However, if you choose to access 100 percent of your home's equity, there are many ways you could use the available funds: making home improvements, consolidating other higher-interest rate credit accounts to simplify monthly finances, purchasing big-ticket items or clearing up medical expenses, for example.

Even though home equity loans can carry lower interest rates than unsecured credit, there is still some risk. Defaulting on any home loan, including a 100 percent home equity loan or 100 percent mortgage refinance, could mean losing your house.

Keeping that in mind, there are times when using 100 percent of your home's equity or home's value may be the right decision for you.