Retirement

How to Turn Your Home Equity Into Retirement Income Without Selling Your House

A retired couple reviewing home equity documents at a kitchen table with a model house and financial papers in front of them

Fact-checked by the The Credit Scout editorial team

Quick Answer

To generate home equity retirement income without selling your house, you can use a Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) reverse mortgage, a HELOC, a home equity loan, a cash-out refinance, or a Home Equity Investment agreement. U.S. homeowners aged 62 and older currently hold a record $14.66 trillion in housing wealth. Most strategies take 30–60 days to close and require meaningful equity, typically at least 50% of your home’s value.

Five main strategies can convert home equity into retirement income without selling, and for most homeowners over 62, the decision comes down to one of two products: a Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) or a Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC). According to NRMLA/RiskSpan’s Q3 2025 Reverse Mortgage Market Index, American seniors now hold a record $14.66 trillion in housing wealth. For many households, that equity is by far the largest financial asset they own, yet most retirement plans treat it as untouchable.

This is changing. After years of stagnation, reverse mortgage volume climbed 6.23% in 2025 according to the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association, as more retirees recognized that a home is not just shelter, it is a funded, accessible asset. At the same time, Fannie Mae updated its guidelines in March 2026 to allow ADU rental income to count toward mortgage qualifying income, opening a new income angle for homeowners willing to build or rent out a separate unit.

This guide is written for homeowners between 55 and 75 who carry meaningful equity, want to stay in their homes, and need a structured way to evaluate which tool fits their situation. By the end, you will understand how each strategy works, what it costs, how it interacts with taxes and Medicare, and how to match the right approach to your retirement stage.

Key Takeaways

  • U.S. homeowners aged 62 and older hold a record $14.66 trillion in housing wealth as of Q3 2025, according to the NRMLA/RiskSpan Reverse Mortgage Market Index, making home equity the largest financial asset for many retirees.
  • As of Q1 2025, 46.2% of mortgaged U.S. residential properties are “equity rich,” meaning their outstanding loan balance is less than half the home’s estimated value, per Bankrate citing Cotality/ATTOM data.
  • A HECM line of credit grows each year at the loan’s interest rate plus the 0.5% FHA mortgage insurance premium, meaning a line opened at 65 and left untouched is worth substantially more by 75, a feature no standard HELOC can replicate, per the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
  • The Medicare IRMAA surcharge threshold in 2026 is $109,000 for single filers, exceeding it by even $1 triggers at least $1,148.40 in additional annual premiums, a cost that certain equity strategies (like a large cash-out refinance with taxable proceeds) can accidentally trigger.
  • Vanguard’s November 2025 research found that fully extracting home equity would improve baby boomer retirement readiness by 20 percentage points, raising the share on track from roughly 40% to 60%, meaningful, but not a universal fix for those with severe savings shortfalls.
  • The HECM lending limit rose to $1,249,125 in 2026 per FHA, while the average homeowner holds more than $300,000 in total equity, of which over $200,000 is considered tappable.

Step 1: Why Home Equity Is Probably Your Biggest Retirement Asset

For the majority of American homeowners approaching retirement, equity in the primary residence is the single largest item on their personal balance sheet, and most retirement plans leave it completely off the table. That is a planning error worth correcting before you choose any specific tool.

The Scale of the Problem

Vanguard research published in November 2025 found that a typical baby boomer earning around $56,000 per year is projected to retire with roughly $120,000 in net worth excluding home equity, while facing an annual spending shortfall of about 24%. The same research estimated that fully extracting home equity could raise retirement readiness by 20 percentage points, bringing approximately 60% of baby boomers on track to maintain their lifestyle, a significant improvement, though still not a complete solution for everyone.

Americans say they need $1.26 million saved to retire comfortably, according to Northwestern Mutual’s 2025 Planning and Progress Study. For households who fall well short of that target, the equity in their home is not a nice-to-have supplement. It may be the primary financial lever available.

“Home equity has become a major source of financial security for Americans entering retirement.”

— Nadia Evangelou, Principal Economist and Director of Real Estate Research, National Association of REALTORS®

Reframing Equity as an Active Asset

Most homeowners treat equity as a safety net of last resort: something to sell into only if everything else fails. The more useful mental model treats it as a fundable, accessible line item in the retirement income plan, one that can be coordinated with Social Security, investment withdrawals, and tax planning rather than held in reserve indefinitely.

One honest constraint applies upfront: lenders still evaluate your ability to repay when you apply for a HELOC or home equity loan. In retirement, W-2 income is gone, replaced by Social Security distributions, pension payments, and investment withdrawals, and some lenders handle this income documentation differently. If you have significant equity but modest documented income, your options may narrow to products that do not require traditional income qualification, which shapes the decision we cover in Step 5.

By the Numbers

Only 28,172 federally insured HECM reverse mortgages were endorsed in federal fiscal year 2025, per HUD data published by NRMLA, a fraction of the eligible senior homeowner population, suggesting most households with the most to gain have not yet acted.

Step 2: Before You Pick a Tool, Know What You Are Actually Solving For

Choosing an equity strategy before defining your income problem almost always leads to a mismatch. Answer three diagnostic questions first, then the product choice becomes much clearer.

The Three-Question Diagnostic

First, what type of income do you need: a monthly cash flow, a one-time lump sum, or a standby reserve you can draw on if needed? Monthly income points toward a HECM tenure payment or HELOC draw; a lump sum points toward a home equity loan or cash-out refinance; a standby emergency reserve points toward a HECM line of credit left open and growing.

Second, how long do you realistically plan to stay in this home? Products like the HECM are most cost-effective over a long horizon because the upfront costs (a 2% FHA mortgage insurance premium at closing plus origination fees of $2,000 to $6,000 and standard closing costs) are amortized over more years. If you expect to move within five years, the math often favors a HELOC instead.

Third, how does your health trajectory factor in? This question is not optional. The HECM has a 12-consecutive-month nursing home rule: if the borrower is absent from the property for more than 12 consecutive months due to hospitalization or long-term care, the loan becomes due and payable. For any retiree with a realistic near-term long-term care risk, this single clause changes the calculus entirely. A HELOC or Home Equity Investment may be more appropriate even if the HECM looks better on paper.

Calculating Your Usable Equity

Total equity and usable equity are not the same thing. Most lenders cap borrowing at 80% of your home’s value across all liens combined. If your home is worth $500,000 and you have $100,000 left on your mortgage, the theoretical maximum HELOC or home equity loan balance is $300,000 ($500,000 × 0.80, minus the $100,000 you still owe). HECMs use a different calculation based on age, current interest rates, and the appraised value, typically yielding a lower percentage for younger borrowers but no required repayment during the life of the loan.

Run your usable equity number before evaluating any product. It is the foundation every other decision rests on. If you are also weighing how this fits into a broader retirement savings picture, our guide on how to start building a retirement fund in your 40s covers the sequencing logic that applies well into pre-retirement.

Pro Tip

Ask a HUD-approved HECM counselor to run your Principal Limit calculation before you speak to any lender. Counseling is required for all HECM applicants and typically costs $125 or less. It is the single cheapest way to understand what the HECM would actually pay you based on your age, home value, and current rates before you are in a sales conversation.

Step 3: The Five Main Ways to Turn Equity Into Income Without Selling

Five distinct mechanisms can convert home equity into usable retirement income, each with a different cost structure, qualification requirement, and risk profile. None is universally superior; the right choice depends on the diagnostic from Step 2.

The Five Mechanisms at a Glance

1. HECM Reverse Mortgage: Available to homeowners aged 62 and older, federally insured through HUD’s FHA program. No monthly mortgage payment is required. The loan becomes due when the borrower sells, moves out permanently, or is absent for 12 consecutive months. HUD administers the HECM program as the only federally insured reverse mortgage available in the United States. HECM proceeds can be taken as a lump sum, monthly payments, a line of credit, or a combination.

2. Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC): A revolving credit line secured by your home, typically variable-rate, with a draw period (often 10 years) followed by a repayment period. Requires income and credit qualification. Carries a meaningful risk: lenders can freeze or reduce a HELOC at any time, as happened systemically in 2008 when home values fell. A HELOC is best treated as a flexible short-term tool, not a long-term income anchor.

3. Home Equity Loan: A fixed-rate lump sum secured by the home, with a set repayment schedule. Requires income verification, which can be a hurdle for retirees on Social Security and investment income. Useful when you need a defined amount for a specific purpose, a medical bill, a home renovation, and can document sufficient income to qualify.

4. Cash-Out Refinance: Replaces your existing mortgage with a larger one and gives you the difference in cash. Almost never makes financial sense if you hold a mortgage originated between 2020 and 2022 at sub-3% rates. Trading a 2.75% mortgage for a current-rate replacement significantly increases your monthly obligations and reduces overall cash flow in retirement.

5. Home Equity Investment (HEI) / Shared Equity Agreement: A company such as Hometap, Point, or Unison provides a lump sum today in exchange for a share of your home’s future appreciation at settlement. No monthly payments, no interest charges. The cost is entirely deferred and back-loaded: the investor receives the original investment back plus an agreed share of appreciation. In a market where home values rise 5% annually over 10 years, the effective cost can far exceed what a conventional loan would have charged in interest. HEI proceeds are generally treated as equity proceeds rather than income, which carries a potential advantage for IRMAA-sensitive retirees covered in Step 6.

The ADU Income Angle Most Articles Skip

Building or renting out an Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) on your property is an equity-activation strategy that requires no borrowing and no product. In high-demand markets, a detached ADU can generate $2,500 to $4,000 per month in rental income. Homes with ADUs sell for 20 to 35% more on average. In March 2026, Fannie Mae updated its policy to allow ADU rental income to count toward mortgage qualifying income, a significant structural change for homeowners considering financing an ADU construction through a home equity loan.

Renting a spare bedroom under programs like Silvernest or HomeShare generates more modest income but requires zero construction and no debt. The income is taxable, but depreciation deductions apply to the rental portion of the property.

Side-by-side comparison of five home equity retirement income strategies with cost and qualification icons
Strategy Monthly Payment Required Income Qualification Upfront Costs Best For
HECM Reverse Mortgage None No income/credit minimum; equity-based 2% FHA MIP + $2,000–$6,000 origination + closing costs Age 62+, long-term stay, fixed income
HELOC Yes (interest-only in draw period, then principal + interest) Full income and credit check Minimal; typically $500–$1,000 in fees Short-term flexibility, documented income
Home Equity Loan Yes (fixed monthly payment) Full income and credit check 2%–5% of loan amount in closing costs One-time lump sum need, reliable income
Cash-Out Refinance Yes (new full mortgage payment) Full income and credit check 2%–5% of new loan amount Rarely beneficial post-2020 low-rate mortgage holders
Home Equity Investment (HEI) None Equity-based, less stringent 3%–5% of amount upfront; appreciation share at settlement Short/medium term, IRMAA-sensitive retirees

The comparison above uses specific cost ranges rather than vague estimates because the difference between a HELOC’s minimal setup cost and a HECM’s $15,000-plus upfront load on a $400,000 home is a real planning factor, not a footnote.

Step 4: How Does the HECM Line of Credit Work as a Market Volatility Buffer?

The HECM line of credit is the most misunderstood and most underused feature in retirement income planning. Used proactively, it can protect a portfolio from sequence-of-returns risk, the threat that a bad market early in retirement permanently damages your financial position.

Why Sequence of Returns Matters

Sequence-of-returns risk describes what happens when you are forced to sell investments at depressed prices to fund living expenses. A portfolio that might have fully recovered if left alone is permanently impaired when you sell during the dip. Research published in the Journal of Financial Planning by researchers including Harold Sacks, Barry Sacks, and Wade Pfau established that using a HECM line of credit as a non-correlated buffer asset, drawing from it during market downturns rather than selling investments, can significantly reduce the probability of portfolio exhaustion without requiring the homeowner to sell or transfer ownership of the home.

The practical implication: when markets are down 20%, draw from the HECM line instead of your investment account. When markets recover, draw from investments again and let the HECM line replenish or grow. This coordination strategy gives your portfolio time to recover.

The Growth Feature Competitors Rarely Explain

Here is the feature that most articles either omit entirely or mention in a single vague sentence: an unused HECM line of credit grows each year at the loan’s interest rate plus the 0.5% FHA mortgage insurance premium. A credit line established at age 65 and left entirely untouched becomes progressively more valuable each year. By age 75 it could be worth considerably more than the original amount, depending on prevailing rates. No standard HELOC can replicate this. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau confirms this as a documented feature of the HECM program, though it also cautions that the loan balance rises over time as well.

The strategic implication is clear: the best time to open a HECM line of credit is before you need it. By the time markets are down 20%, it is too late to establish one. A retiree who sets up the line at 65 and does not touch it has a larger, still-accessible reserve at 70 or 75, precisely when they may need it most.

The Real Costs. This Is Not a Free Tool.

A HECM involves a 2% upfront FHA mortgage insurance premium calculated on the maximum claim amount (capped at $1,249,125 in 2026), plus origination fees that can reach $6,000, plus standard title and appraisal closing costs. On a $500,000 home, total upfront costs could run $15,000 to $20,000 or more. The longer you borrow and the longer interest compounds, the less equity remains for heirs. This is not a minor consideration. The CFPB’s formal Reverse Mortgages Report explicitly warns that a reverse mortgage is not free money and that the loan balance rises over time.

Watch Out

The CFPB also warns that using a reverse mortgage to bridge income while delaying Social Security can cost more in fees and compounding interest than the lifetime Social Security gain. Run the numbers for your specific situation with a fee-only financial planner before using a HECM as a Social Security delay bridge.

“At a time when inflation pressures and the fear of outliving one’s retirement savings remain top concerns for retirees, home equity stands out as a powerful — yet often underutilized — financial resource.”

— Steve Irwin, President, National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association (NRMLA)

Step 5: HELOC vs. HECM vs. HEI, How Do I Choose the Right Product?

The right product for your situation depends on three practical variables: how much monthly cash flow tolerance you have, how easily you can document income for a lender, and how long you plan to stay in the home. Each variable points in a different direction.

Decision Variables That Matter

Monthly cash flow tolerance: HECMs require no monthly payment whatsoever. HELOCs require at minimum interest-only payments during the draw period, then shift to principal-plus-interest repayment, a payment shock that surprises many borrowers. If your retirement budget is tight, a product with mandatory monthly payments adds a fixed obligation that can create problems if income is interrupted.

Income and credit qualification: HECMs qualify primarily on equity, age, and the ability to pay property taxes and homeowner’s insurance, not on income or credit score in the traditional sense. HELOCs and home equity loans require full income verification. For retirees whose income consists of Social Security benefits and investment account withdrawals, documenting sufficient income to satisfy a conventional lender can be unexpectedly difficult, especially if withdrawals are variable.

Time horizon in the home: Short-term or uncertain tenure favors a HELOC because the upfront cost is low. Long-term aging in place, remaining in the home for 10, 15, or 20 more years, makes the HECM’s upfront cost worthwhile and allows the credit line growth feature to compound in your favor. For a retiree unsure whether they will need assisted living within five years, a HELOC or HEI is probably the more appropriate tool, particularly given the HECM’s 12-consecutive-month absence rule.

The HELOC Freeze Risk Is Real

Banks froze HELOCs systemically in 2008 and 2009 as home values declined. Lenders exercised their contractual right to reduce or suspend credit lines precisely when homeowners needed them most. A federally insured HECM line of credit cannot be frozen by the lender as long as loan obligations, primarily maintaining the property and paying taxes and insurance, are met. This is a structural, verifiable difference documented by HUD’s Office of Policy Development and Research. Anyone using a HELOC as a standby emergency reserve should understand this risk exists.

HEI Costs Are Consistently Underestimated

Home Equity Investments from companies like Hometap, Point, and Unison are marketed around the absence of monthly payments and interest charges. Both are accurate. What is less visible is the three-stage cost structure: an upfront processing fee (typically 3% to 5% of the amount), potential ongoing charges during the holding period, and the settlement cost when you sell or buy out the investor’s share. The settlement cost, the investor’s share of home appreciation, is where the real expense accumulates. In a market where home values appreciate at 5% annually over 10 years, the effective cost of the HEI can substantially exceed what a conventional loan at the same term would have cost in interest. This is not a reason to avoid HEIs entirely. It is a reason to model the full cost before signing.

HEI proceeds are generally not counted as taxable income at the time of receipt, which can be an advantage for retirees trying to stay below Medicare’s IRMAA income thresholds, a topic we cover directly in Step 6. If you are also working through IRA strategy decisions, comparing the Roth IRA vs. Traditional IRA tax treatment can help you understand how each equity strategy interacts with your existing accounts.

Flowchart showing decision path for choosing between HECM, HELOC, and HEI based on age and income
Did You Know?

As of Q1 2025, 46.2% of mortgaged U.S. residential properties are considered “equity rich,” with an outstanding loan balance less than half the home’s estimated value, per Bankrate citing Cotality/ATTOM data. That means nearly half of all mortgage-holding homeowners in the U.S. already have enough equity to realistically qualify for multiple strategies covered in this guide.

Step 6: What Are the Tax and Medicare Risks of Tapping Home Equity in Retirement?

The most consequential and least-discussed risk of tapping home equity in retirement is the Medicare IRMAA surcharge, a hard income cliff that can cost thousands of dollars annually if triggered by the wrong equity strategy in the wrong year.

The IRMAA Cliff, Explained

In 2026, a single retiree whose Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) exceeds $109,000 by even $1 triggers a Medicare Part B and Part D surcharge. At the lowest income tier above the threshold, that surcharge totals at least $1,148.40 in additional annual Medicare premiums. At the highest income tier, it reaches $6,936 annually per person. Married couples face the same cliff at a combined $218,000. Because IRMAA is assessed based on income from two years prior, a large taxable event today creates a Medicare premium spike two years later, a delayed consequence that many retirees never anticipate.

This is not a sliding scale. It is a cliff. A cash-out refinance that generates proceeds treated as taxable income, a large traditional IRA withdrawal to fund home improvements, or a significant capital gain from a rental property sale can all push you over the threshold and trigger a surcharge that lasts two years.

How Each Equity Strategy Maps to IRMAA

HECM draws are tax-free loan proceeds and do not count toward MAGI. They are invisible to IRMAA. This is a significant planning advantage for retirees in the $80,000 to $108,999 MAGI range who need supplemental income but cannot afford to push over the threshold.

HEI proceeds are generally treated as equity proceeds, not income, at the time of receipt. Like HECM draws, they typically do not count toward MAGI. This makes HEIs potentially useful for IRMAA-sensitive retirees who need a lump sum.

HELOC proceeds are also loan proceeds and not taxable income. HELOC interest may be tax-deductible if the funds are used to buy, build, or substantially improve the home securing the loan, but not if used for living expenses or debt payoff, under the rules clarified by the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

Rental income from a spare room or ADU is fully taxable ordinary income and will count toward MAGI. It also allows depreciation deductions on the rental portion of the property, which can reduce the taxable amount, but planning is required to get the most out of that benefit. For a practical guide to related deductions, see our overview of self-employed tax deductions you might be missing, which covers depreciation and home-use rules applicable to rental income situations.

The Spousal and Estate Complication

One issue that most articles omit entirely: if only one spouse is listed as the HECM borrower and that borrower dies or moves permanently to long-term care, the surviving spouse’s right to remain in the home depends on whether they are a co-borrower or an eligible non-borrowing spouse under HUD’s current rules. Co-borrowers have full rights. Non-borrowing spouses have protections under rules established in 2015, but those protections have conditions and limits that differ from co-borrower status. Heirs who want to keep the property must repay the outstanding loan balance within a defined period, typically six months with one potential extension. These details require a conversation with a HUD-approved HECM counselor before closing.

Watch Out

If you are approaching retirement and considering Roth conversions to reduce future RMDs, timing those conversions in the same years you draw home equity income could push your MAGI over the IRMAA threshold. These decisions interact. Model them together, not independently. Our breakdown of Social Security benefits changes in 2026 covers income thresholds that also intersect with this planning window.

Step 7: What Does a Realistic Home Equity Income Plan Look Like for My Situation?

There is no single universal strategy, but most retirees fall into one of three archetypes, each of which points toward a specific tool combination and sequencing approach.

Three Retirement Stage Archetypes

Archetype 1, Ages 62 to 68, still healthy, some investment portfolio: Open a HECM line of credit now and leave it untouched. Draw from your investment portfolio for normal living expenses. If markets drop significantly, switch to drawing from the HECM line and let the portfolio recover. By not selling depressed assets, you preserve the portfolio’s long-term value while the HECM line continues to grow. This is the sequence-of-returns protection strategy, and it is most valuable when executed early.

Archetype 2, Age 70 and older, income primarily from Social Security and pension, want to stay in the home long-term: A HECM monthly tenure payment or line-of-credit draws become the most sustainable income supplement. The absence of a required monthly payment aligns with a fixed-income lifestyle, and the federally insured line cannot be frozen. Heirs will receive less equity, but a livable retirement is not a trade-off to dismiss lightly.

Archetype 3, Ages 55 to 62, high equity, not yet HECM-eligible: A HELOC serves as a short-term bridge, providing access to equity before HECM eligibility at 62. Use it conservatively, with a clear plan to evaluate a HECM at eligibility and close or convert accordingly. At this age, the long planning horizon also makes an ADU a viable income play. The capital cost of construction can be financed through the HELOC, and rental income begins immediately while HECM eligibility builds.

The Sequencing Question Nobody Asks

Equity decisions cannot be made in isolation from Social Security timing, Roth conversion opportunities, and Required Minimum Distribution onset. The window between full retirement and age 73, when RMDs from traditional IRAs begin, is typically the lowest-income window of retirement. It is the optimal period for Roth conversions, since you are filling lower tax brackets at lower rates. Drawing tax-free HECM income during those same years preserves that conversion window, allowing more pre-tax money to convert at low rates before RMDs force distributions at higher rates.

These interactions are substantial. A fee-only financial planner or a CPA with retirement income experience is worth consulting before finalizing any equity access strategy. If you are mapping out this entire retirement income picture, our guide on building a retirement fund in your 40s and the deeper look at Solo 401(k) mechanics provide useful context on the portfolio side of the equation.

An Honest Concession on What Equity Can and Cannot Do

Equity is not a substitute for savings. Vanguard’s 2025 research found that even fully extracting home equity, selling the home and renting, raises baby boomer retirement readiness by 20 percentage points, bringing 60% on track. That means 40% of baby boomers remain off track even with full equity extraction. For households with severe savings shortfalls, accessing equity buys time and reduces the severity of the problem, but it likely needs to be paired with spending adjustments, a longer working timeline, or significantly reduced retirement spending expectations.

Chart showing retirement readiness improvement by equity access strategy and age group
Pro Tip

If you are within five years of retirement and your budget feels tight, review your overall money management framework before committing to an equity product. Our breakdown of common money management mistakes covers spending pattern issues that often reduce how much equity actually reaches a retirement income plan after unnecessary expenses are paid first.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I get a reverse mortgage if I still have a mortgage on my home?

Yes, you can get a HECM reverse mortgage even if you still have an existing mortgage balance, but the HECM must be in first-lien position, which means the existing mortgage must be paid off at or before closing, typically using a portion of the HECM proceeds. If your remaining mortgage balance is small relative to your equity, this is straightforward. If the balance is large, there may not be enough HECM proceeds left over after payoff to make the product worthwhile. The CFPB’s reverse mortgage guidance walks through this payoff requirement in detail.

What happens to a reverse mortgage when I die, does my family have to sell the house?

Your heirs are not required to sell the house, but they must repay the outstanding loan balance to keep it, typically within six months of your death, with one potential 90-day extension. They can repay using other funds, refinance the balance into a traditional mortgage in their own names, or sell the home and keep any equity above the loan balance. If the home sells for less than the loan balance, FHA mortgage insurance covers the difference, so heirs are not personally liable for the shortfall. The HUD HECM program page outlines these protections.

Is a HELOC or reverse mortgage better for supplementing retirement income?

For retirees aged 62 and older who plan to stay in the home long-term and have limited documented income, a HECM reverse mortgage is typically the stronger tool: no required monthly payment, a credit line that cannot be frozen, and no income qualification hurdle. A HELOC is better for shorter time horizons, documented-income borrowers, or pre-HECM-eligible homeowners between 55 and 62. The HELOC’s low upfront cost is an advantage; its repayment shock and freeze risk are real disadvantages. If there is any chance you will need the line during a market downturn, the HECM’s federally insured status matters more than the HELOC’s lower entry cost.

How much income can I actually get from a reverse mortgage each month?

The monthly tenure payment from a HECM depends on your age, the current expected interest rate, and your home’s appraised value (up to the 2026 HECM lending limit of $1,249,125). Older borrowers with higher-value homes and lower current interest rates receive larger payments. A 70-year-old with a $500,000 home free and clear might receive roughly $1,200 to $1,800 per month in tenure payments under typical 2026 rate conditions, though the actual figure requires a formal Principal Limit calculation from a HUD-approved counselor. The HUD HECM Program Analysis documents historical payment structures across different borrower profiles.

Do reverse mortgage proceeds affect my Social Security or Medicare benefits?

HECM proceeds do not affect Social Security income because they are loan proceeds, not earned income. They also do not count toward Medicare IRMAA income thresholds because they are not included in Modified Adjusted Gross Income. However, if you leave HECM proceeds sitting in a bank account at the end of the month, that cash balance could affect Medicaid eligibility if you ever apply, since Medicaid has asset limits. Spend or invest HECM proceeds before month-end if Medicaid eligibility is a near-term concern. Social Security timing decisions that interact with this planning are covered in our guide to Social Security benefits changes in 2026.

Should I use home equity to delay taking Social Security until age 70?

Using home equity income to bridge the gap between retirement and age 70, allowing Social Security to grow at roughly 8% per year past full retirement age, can make actuarial sense for healthy individuals with a long life expectancy. However, the CFPB’s formal reverse mortgage report specifically warns that using a reverse mortgage as the bridge vehicle can cost more in fees and compounding interest than the lifetime Social Security gain. A HELOC or other lower-cost equity strategy is worth evaluating for this specific purpose before defaulting to a HECM as the bridging tool.

What is a home equity investment and is it worth it for retirement income?

A Home Equity Investment (HEI), offered by companies like Hometap, Point, and Unison, provides a lump sum in exchange for a share of your home’s future appreciation, with no monthly payments and no interest charges. It can be worth considering for retirees who need a lump sum, cannot qualify for a HELOC or home equity loan due to income documentation challenges, and want to keep MAGI below IRMAA thresholds. The downside is the back-loaded cost: in a rising housing market, the investor’s appreciation share can make the effective cost substantially higher than a conventional loan. HEIs also have term limits (typically 10 to 30 years), at which point you must sell, refinance, or buy out the investor’s share. Model the full cost under realistic appreciation assumptions before signing.

What credit score do I need to tap my home equity in retirement?

Credit score requirements vary by product. HECMs do not have a minimum credit score requirement, though lenders do conduct a financial assessment to verify you can maintain property taxes, insurance, and basic home upkeep. HELOCs and home equity loans typically require a minimum score of 620 to 680, with better rates available above 720. Cash-out refinances follow conventional mortgage guidelines, generally requiring 620 or higher. HEIs from companies like Hometap and Point have more flexible credit requirements, though they still review credit as part of underwriting. If your credit needs attention before applying, our guide to DIY credit repair covers the most effective steps to improve your score before a loan application.

Can I use home equity to fund long-term care costs without selling my house?

Yes, but product selection here requires careful thought given the HECM’s 12-consecutive-month nursing home rule. If you receive care at home, through home health aides or adult day programs, a HECM remains fully intact as long as you continue living in the home. If you need facility-based care for more than 12 consecutive months, the HECM becomes due and payable. For retirees with a realistic near-term long-term care risk, a HELOC or HEI may be the safer equity product to establish now, preserving the option to use the home’s value without triggering premature loan repayment. A long-term care insurance policy held alongside any equity strategy adds another layer of protection.

YB

Yuna Baek-Morrison

Staff Writer

Yuna Baek-Morrison is a consumer credit specialist and former loan underwriter who spent nearly a decade evaluating credit profiles for a top-five U.S. auto lender. She now channels that insider knowledge into practical, no-nonsense guidance on credit building, auto financing, and smart borrowing strategies. Her work has been cited in several personal finance publications, and she holds a certificate in financial counseling from the AFCPE.