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What should you look for when
shopping for a plan?
If you decide to apply for a home equity line, look for the plan
that best meets your particular needs. Look carefully at the credit
agreement and examine the terms and conditions of various plans,
including the annual percentage rate (APR) and the costs you'll pay to
establish the plan. The disclosed APR will not reflect the closing
costs and other fees and charges, so you'll need to compare these costs,
as well as the APR's, among lenders.
Interest Rate Charges and Plan Features
Home equity plans typically involve variable interest rates rather
than fixed rates. A variable rate must be based on a publicly available
index (such as the prime rate published in some major daily newspapers
or a U.S. Treasury bill rate); the interest rate will change, mirroring
fluctuations in the index. To figure the interest rate that you will
pay, most lenders add a margin, such as 2 percentage points, to the
index value. Because the cost of borrowing is tied directly to the
index rate, it is important to find out what index and margin each
lender uses, how often the index changes, and how high it has risen in
the past.
Sometimes lenders advertise a temporarily discounted rate for home
equity lines-a rate that is unusually low and often lasts only for an
introductory period, such as six months.
Variable rate plans secured by a dwelling must have a ceiling (or
cap) on how high your interest rate can climb over the life of the plan.
Some variable-rate plans limit how much your payment may increase, and
also how low your interest rate may fall if interest rates drop.
Some lenders may permit you to convert a variable rate to a fixed
interest rate during the life of the plan, or to convert all or a
portion of your line to a fixed-term installment loan.
Agreements generally will permit the lender to freeze or reduce
your credit line under certain circumstances. For example, some
variable-rate plans may not allow you to get additional funds during any
period the interest rate reaches the cap.
The above text was extracted directly from
What You Should Know About Home Equity Lines of Credit--
When Your Home Is On The Line:
As published by the Federal Reserve Board. This presentation of the information is
copyrighted ©1997 by Mortgage Market Information Services, Inc.
Pg 1 -- What is a home equity line of credit?
Pg 2 -- What should you look for when shopping for a plan?
Pg 3 -- Costs to Obtain a Home Equity Line
Pg 4 -- How will you repay your home equity plan?
Pg 5 -- Comparing a line of credit/traditional 2nd mtg.loan
Pg 6 -- Disclosures from Lenders
Pg 7 -- Glossary
Pg 8 -- Where to Go for Help
Pg 9 -- CHECKLIST
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