To conduct the National Average survey, Bankrate obtains rate information from the 10 largest banks and thrifts in 10 large U.S. markets. The rates shown above are calculated using a loan or line amount of $30,000, with a FICO score of 700 and a combined loan-to-value ratio of 80 percent.
Note: The above APRs are current as of January 1, 2025. The exact APR you might qualify for depends on your credit score and other factors, such as whether you're an existing customer or enroll in auto-payments.
National home equity loan interest rate trends
Home equity loans stay still as the year ends
Home equity rates were virtually unchanged this week, with the average rate on the 10-year, $30,000 home equity loan and the 15-year $30,000 loan at 8.55 percent and 8.49 percent respectively as of Jan 1, according to Bankrate’s survey of large lenders.
Unlike HELOCs, home equity loan rates are fixed. Once you close your loan, your rate will stay the same whether market rates rise or fall (unless you refinance). However, interest rates on new home equity loans do shift in response to economic conditions and influences, including Federal Reserve monetary policy. The Fed has been lowering interest rates in its latest meetings; the last cut was by a quarter point in its Dec. 17-18 meeting of 2024, its final gathering of the year.
Home equity loans have gradually sunk in response, though not without some bobbing up and down. CFA Greg McBride, chief financial analyst for Bankrate, forecasts three more cuts by the Fed in 2025, and predicts that in response, the average home equity loan rate will fall 0.51 percentage point from its year-end 2024 level – down to just under 8 percent.
Generally, a home equity loan is the best option when you’re certain of the total lump sum you need and exactly when and how you’ll spend the money. Home improvement remains the leading use for these loans. Sixty-one percent of Gen X homeowners say renovations or repairs is a good reason to tap home equity makes sense, compared to 46 percent of millennials, according to Bankrate’s Home Equity Insights Survey.
“Rising home prices support home equity loan demand as homeowners will more likely renovate their current home vs. sell and buy a new home at a higher interest rate in a competitive housing marketplace,” says Kori Sassower, founder and principal agent at The Kori Sassower Team, a real estate firm based in New York.