Home Equity Loan Calculator
Calculate how much equity you have in your property and determine your borrowing potential. Enter your details below to receive an instant estimate.
Your Results
How to Use This Calculator
Getting started is straightforward. Simply follow these steps to discover your home equity position and borrowing options:
- Enter your property value: Use recent valuations from estate agents or online property portals like Rightmove or Zoopla for the most accurate estimate.
- Input your mortgage balance: Check your latest mortgage statement or contact your lender to find out exactly how much you still owe.
- Specify your desired loan: Enter the amount you’re considering borrowing against your property equity.
- Provide your age: This helps determine eligibility for certain products like equity release schemes, which typically require you to be 55 or older.
- Select property type: Different property types may affect lending criteria and maximum loan amounts available.
- Review your results: The calculator instantly shows your available equity, borrowing potential, and important LTV ratios.
What Is Home Equity?
Home equity represents the portion of your property that you truly own outright. It’s calculated by subtracting your outstanding mortgage balance from your property’s current market value. As you pay down your mortgage or as your property increases in value, your equity grows.
How Equity Builds Over Time
Your equity increases in two primary ways: through mortgage repayments and property appreciation. Every monthly payment reduces your debt, whilst rising house prices boost your property’s value. Both factors work together to build your ownership stake.
Why Equity Matters
Equity serves as a valuable financial resource. You can leverage it for home improvements, debt consolidation, purchasing additional property, or funding major life expenses. It’s essentially wealth you’ve accumulated through property ownership.
Types of Equity Loans Available
| Loan Type | Age Requirement | Monthly Payments | When Repaid |
|---|---|---|---|
| Further Advance | 18+ | Capital & Interest | End of term |
| Retirement Interest-Only | 55+ | Interest only | Sale of property |
| Lifetime Mortgage | 55+ | None (interest rolls up) | Sale of property |
| Home Reversion | 65+ | None | Sale of property |
Further Advance Mortgages
This option allows you to borrow additional funds from your existing lender whilst keeping your current mortgage. You’ll make regular monthly payments covering both capital and interest, similar to your original mortgage. It’s suitable if you have sufficient income to afford the increased payments.
Retirement Interest-Only Mortgages
Available from age 55, these require monthly interest payments whilst the capital remains unchanged. The loan is repaid when you pass away or move into long-term care. Your property must be sold to repay the debt, though this protects your estate from runaway interest accumulation.
Lifetime Mortgages
The most popular equity release product requires no monthly payments. Interest compounds over time and is added to the loan balance. This can significantly reduce the inheritance you leave, but provides immediate access to cash without ongoing payment obligations.
Loan-to-Value Explained
Loan-to-Value (LTV) expresses the total borrowing against your property as a percentage of its value. Lenders use this metric to assess risk – lower LTVs typically qualify for better interest rates because they represent less risk.
LTV Categories and What They Mean
Up to 60% LTV: Excellent equity position. You’ll access the best rates and most favourable terms. Lenders view you as very low risk.
60-75% LTV: Good equity position. You’ll still access competitive rates with plenty of lender options available.
75-85% LTV: Moderate equity position. Rates may be slightly higher, but mainstream lending remains accessible.
Above 85% LTV: Limited equity. Fewer products available and higher rates apply. Some specialist lenders may still offer options up to 95% for specific circumstances.
Combined LTV Considerations
When taking an additional loan, lenders calculate your combined LTV by adding all borrowing together. Most lenders cap combined LTV at 85%, though this varies by product and individual circumstances.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common Calculation Mistakes to Avoid
Using Outdated Property Valuations
Property values fluctuate constantly. Using a valuation from several years ago can seriously misrepresent your equity position. Always use current market data from recent sales of comparable properties in your area.
Forgetting About Additional Secured Loans
If you have a second charge mortgage or secured loan, remember to include this in your outstanding debt calculations. Only counting your primary mortgage will overstate your available equity.
Ignoring Early Repayment Charges
Your existing mortgage may have early repayment charges (ERCs) if you’re still within an initial fixed or discounted period. These charges can be substantial – sometimes thousands of pounds – and must be factored into your decision-making.
Overlooking Associated Costs
Releasing equity involves various costs: valuation fees, legal fees, arrangement fees, and potentially financial advice costs. These can total several thousand pounds and reduce the net amount you receive.
Miscalculating Combined LTV
When adding a new loan to existing borrowing, some people calculate LTV on the new loan alone. However, lenders assess combined LTV – the total of all borrowing against property value. This distinction significantly affects eligibility and rates.
Making the Most of Your Equity
Strategic Home Improvements
Using equity for home improvements can increase your property’s value, potentially offsetting some borrowing costs. Focus on improvements with strong returns: kitchens, bathrooms, and extensions typically add the most value. However, be realistic – most improvements return 50-80% of their cost in added value.
Debt Consolidation Considerations
Consolidating expensive unsecured debt (credit cards, personal loans) into a secured equity loan can reduce monthly payments and interest costs. However, you’re converting short-term debt into long-term borrowing secured against your home. If you can’t maintain payments, you risk losing your property.
Supporting Family Members
Many people release equity to help children or grandchildren with house deposits or education costs. Whilst generous, consider the impact on your own financial security and retirement plans. Some equity release products allow you to ring-fence a portion of your property’s value for inheritance.
Investment Property Purchases
Releasing equity to fund buy-to-let investments can generate income, but involves significant risk. Property investment requires substantial capital for deposits, ongoing maintenance, and void periods. Rental income must cover mortgage payments, and property values can fall as well as rise.
Regulatory Protection and Consumer Rights
Equity release products regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) provide important consumer protections. Members of the Equity Release Council offer additional guarantees including the right to remain in your home for life and a no-negative-equity guarantee.
No-Negative-Equity Guarantee
This crucial protection means you’ll never owe more than your home’s sale value. If interest accumulation exceeds property value, the lender absorbs the loss. Your estate and beneficiaries won’t inherit debt.
Right to Remain
Council members guarantee your right to stay in your home for life or until you move into long-term care. This provides security and peace of mind that you won’t be forced to move.
Fixed Interest Rates
Most modern equity release products offer fixed rates, protecting you from interest rate increases. You’ll know exactly how your debt will grow over time.
Portability Options
Many products allow you to transfer your equity release plan if you move to another suitable property. This flexibility is valuable if your circumstances change.
References
- Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). (2024). Mortgages and Home Finance: Conduct of Business sourcebook. London: FCA Handbook.
- Equity Release Council. (2025). Market Report Q1 2025. London: Equity Release Council.
- HM Treasury. (2024). Help to Buy: Equity Loan Scheme – Guidance for Homeowners. London: HM Government.
- Money Helper. (2024). Equity Release Guide. London: Money and Pensions Service.
- Council of Mortgage Lenders. (2024). Lending Standards and Criteria. London: UK Finance.
- Bank of England. (2025). Mortgage Lending Statistics. London: Bank of England.