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Using Home Equity to Pay Off Debt in 2026: Smart Move or Trap?

March 11, 2026
3 min read
Updated May 28, 2026

Consolidating $40,000 of credit-card debt into home equity routinely saves $25,000-$40,000 in interest over 5 years — if you follow one rule.

The mistake most Canadians make: Consolidating credit-card debt into home equity and then running the credit cards up again. The home equity strategy works only if you close or freeze the cards.

What changed in 2026 (and why it matters now)

Credit cards: 19-29% APR. Home equity (HELOC or refinance): roughly prime to prime+1%. The spread is the entire point.

The one rule that makes it work

Close the consolidated credit cards or freeze them. If you keep using them, you have doubled your debt instead of eliminating it. Brokers see this fail pattern every month.

The equity-access math behind the decision

The useful way to evaluate Using Home Equity to Pay Off Debt in 2026: Smart Move or Trap? is to compare monthly payment pressure, total interest cost, setup fees, and exit flexibility. A HELOC can look cheaper because the required payment is often interest-only, but that does not mean the debt is disappearing. A refinance can look more expensive because the payment is higher, yet it may force principal reduction and create a clearer payoff path.

Start with the available equity. Most mainstream lenders cap total borrowing around 80% of appraised value, with the revolving HELOC portion commonly capped lower. From that limit, subtract the current mortgage balance, secured lines, legal costs, appraisal costs, and any lender fees. The number left is not a spending target; it is the maximum room before the file becomes too tight for comfort.

Questions that decide the structure

  • Is the money for a one-time need or ongoing access?
  • Can the household handle payment shock if prime changes?
  • Will the borrowed funds create income, reduce higher-interest debt, or simply increase consumption?
  • Does the current mortgage have a large penalty if refinanced early?
  • Is there a clean repayment plan with dates and dollar amounts?

Risk controls before borrowing against home equity

For home equity debt payoff, the danger is not the product itself; it is using home equity without a repayment system. Consolidating credit cards into a mortgage or HELOC only works if the cards stay paid off after closing. Borrowing for renovations only works if the budget includes overruns, permits, temporary housing, and resale value. Borrowing for investment only works if the tax treatment, cash flow, and downside risk have been reviewed before funds move.

Build a written repayment rule before signing. That could mean converting the used HELOC balance into a fixed segment once the project ends, increasing the mortgage payment by the amount previously paid to credit cards, or setting automatic principal payments after each rent deposit. Without automation, equity borrowing often becomes permanent debt.

When a broker review matters most

A broker review is most valuable when income is variable, the property is in a high-priced market, the mortgage is mid-term, or the use of funds is complex. The right answer may be a HELOC, refinance, second mortgage, readvanceable mortgage, or no new borrowing at all. The comparison should show payment today, payment at a higher prime rate, total interest over the expected hold period, and the exit cost if the plan changes.

Find out how much equity you can actually access

Free, no-commitment equity analysis. We show you HELOC, refinance, and second-mortgage options side by side.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Short-term: small dip. Long-term: lower utilization and on-time mortgage payments improve credit.