A HELOC is paid back by covering monthly interest, then repaying the principal on a set schedule once the draw period ends.
A home equity line of credit (HELOC) can be friendly at the start. You borrow only what you need, the minimum payment can look small, and the line stays open. The tough part is later: borrowing shuts off at draw-end, repayment starts, and many people get hit with a bigger required payment.
If you want to pay your HELOC back with less stress and less interest, you need two things: a clear read of your contract and a payoff plan you can repeat. Below, you’ll get both.
Know the two phases that decide your payment
Most HELOCs have a draw period and a repayment period. During the draw period you can borrow, repay, and borrow again up to your limit. Many plans set the minimum as interest-only, so the balance may barely move.
When the draw period ends, you usually can’t take more money from the line. You enter repayment, where you pay principal plus interest on a schedule set in your agreement. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau notes that payments often rise in repayment, and some HELOCs require the full balance right away when repayment starts. CFPB HELOC repayment period explanation lays out that shift.
Pull these details from your HELOC paperwork
- Draw-end date: the day new borrowing stops.
- Repayment length: often 10–20 years, based on your contract.
- Rate setup: index, margin, and any rate caps.
- Minimum payment rule: interest-only or principal plus interest.
- Balloon wording: language that says the full balance is due at once.
- Fees tied to payoff: early-closure fees, annual fees, prepayment penalties.
Two terms that change the whole plan
Balloon risk: Some HELOCs require a lump-sum payoff at the end. The CFPB’s booklet warns that a balloon can be large and can put your home at risk if you can’t pay it. That kind of HELOC needs an early plan: refinance, convert, or pay principal down hard well before the due date.
Variable rate risk: Many HELOC rates move with the market. If rates climb, your interest cost rises and your payment can jump. Budget slack beats guesswork.
How To Pay Back HELOC with less interest
Think of this as four moves that stack. Each one helps on its own. Together, they speed up payoff and soften the repayment jump.
Step 1: Set a personal “last draw” date
If you’re still in the draw period, stop new borrowing earlier than the lender’s deadline. This is the fastest way to stop balance creep. Once you stop draws, every payment pushes you toward zero.
Step 2: Add a fixed principal amount every month
Interest-only minimums keep the payment low, but they also keep the balance stuck. Add a fixed principal amount each month. Keep it steady. A small amount you repeat is better than a big amount you quit.
A fast way to pick your extra principal
Take your current balance and divide it by the months left in your draw period. That gives a “glide path” amount that would bring the balance to zero by draw-end. If that’s too high, cut it in half and start there. You can raise it later.
Step 3: Aim windfalls at principal
Bonuses, refunds, and one-off cash are good at one job: shrinking the balance so future interest has less to bite into. If your lender charges a payoff-related fee during the first years, you can still pay the balance down while keeping the account open until the fee window ends.
Step 4: Practice the future payment before it becomes mandatory
Don’t wait for draw-end to learn what repayment will feel like. Estimate your repayment payment now using your expected draw-end balance, the repayment term, and today’s rate. Then start paying that amount (or close to it) while you still have draw-period rules. This turns the “payment jump” into a gradual change you control.
Paying back a HELOC after the draw period ends
Once repayment starts, you’re done borrowing and you’re paying principal plus interest. Federal regulators have published guidance because this transition is a common pain point for borrowers and lenders. Interagency guidance on end-of-draw HELOCs explains why planning ahead helps.
At this stage, you usually have three paths: pay as scheduled, pay faster, or replace the debt with a different loan.
Path A: Pay as scheduled, then layer extra principal
If your required payment fits your budget, start there. Then add extra principal as a second payment later in the month. This keeps your baseline stable and gives you flexibility.
Check how your lender applies extra money. You want it to reduce principal, not just prepay the next bill. Use any “principal only” option your lender provides and confirm the next statement shows the drop you expected.
Path B: Refinance when the rate or structure is not working
Refinancing can help if your HELOC rate is high, your payment jump is too steep, or your contract includes a balloon. Common replacements include a fixed-rate home equity loan, a cash-out refinance into a first mortgage, or a new HELOC with better terms. Closing costs matter, so compare the total cost over the time you expect to keep the debt.
Path C: Convert part of the balance to a fixed-rate segment
Some lenders let you lock part of the balance into a fixed-rate segment. This can steady your payment without a full refinance. Ask for the rules in writing and check for conversion fees.
Table: Repayment moves and what they change
Use this table to pick a plan that matches your timing and your contract. You don’t need every move. Pick a few and repeat them.
| Move | When it fits | What it changes |
|---|---|---|
| Set a personal last-draw date | You’re still in the draw period | Stops new borrowing from refilling the balance |
| Add fixed monthly principal | Minimum is interest-only | Reduces the balance before repayment starts |
| Send a second payment mid-month | Cash flow comes in waves | Keeps payoff moving without raising your baseline |
| Use windfalls on principal | Refunds/bonuses show up | Cuts future interest charges |
| Practice the repayment payment now | Draw-end is within 12 months | Turns the payment jump into a controlled change |
| Request a payoff quote near zero | You’re close to payoff | Avoids leftover balances from daily interest |
| Refinance to fixed-rate debt | Rate swings or balloon risk | Creates a predictable schedule |
| Close the line after payoff | You don’t plan to reuse it | Reduces the risk of fees and unwanted re-borrowing |
Cut costs without stepping into tax traps
HELOC interest can be deductible in some cases, but the rules are narrow. The IRS says interest on home equity loans and lines of credit is deductible only when the borrowed money is used to buy, build, or substantially improve the home that secures the loan, and other limits apply. IRS Publication 936 on mortgage interest is the place to verify the details for your situation.
- Don’t count on a deduction when you build your payback plan. Treat the interest as a real cost first.
- Keep records that match each draw to its use, especially if you took multiple draws over time.
Risks to take seriously while you pay it down
A HELOC is secured by your home. Miss payments long enough and the lender can foreclose. The Federal Trade Commission spells out the basics and the disclosure rules lenders must follow. FTC overview of home equity loans and HELOCs is a solid plain-English read.
These risk checks keep you out of trouble:
- Fee windows: Ask if your line has an early-closure fee, and when it expires.
- Payment application: Confirm extra money reduces principal.
- Line freezes: Your contract may allow a freeze or limit cut in certain conditions. Don’t treat the HELOC as a guaranteed cash backstop.
Build a payback plan you’ll still follow in month six
Plans fail when they rely on perfect months. Use this setup so the plan still works when life gets noisy.
Set two payment levels
Baseline: the amount you can pay in a tight month. Put it on autopay to avoid late fees.
Stretch: the amount you can pay in a good month. Send it as a second payment when cash is there.
Pick a target date and reverse-calc
Choose a payoff date you care about, then divide your balance by the months to that date. That gives a simple monthly principal target. If it’s too high, push the date out and rerun the math. Repeat until the number fits your real budget.
Track one metric: balance direction
Once a month, check that the balance is falling. If it’s flat, raise the extra-principal amount or cut spending that is refilling the line. If rates rise, keep your total payment steady so the balance still drops.
Table: A practical timeline from today to payoff
This timeline keeps you ahead of payment changes and closing details. Adjust it based on your draw-end date and your lender’s processing time.
| When | Action | What to verify |
|---|---|---|
| Today | Pull your agreement and last statement | Draw-end date, repayment term, rate formula |
| Within 7 days | Set autopay for your baseline payment | Draft date lines up with your paycheck |
| Within 30 days | Start your extra-principal payment | Next statement shows principal fell as planned |
| 90 days before draw-end | Estimate your repayment-period payment | Budget can handle the new required payment |
| 60 days before draw-end | Compare refinance or fixed-segment options | Fees, closing timeline, payment outcome |
| 30 days before payoff | Request a payoff quote | Per-diem interest, wire/check instructions |
| After payoff posts | Close the line if you won’t reuse it | $0 balance and closed status in writing |
Payoff checklist you can save
- Pay the baseline amount on autopay.
- Send extra principal as a second payment.
- Verify extra money reduced principal on the next statement.
- Check the current rate and keep the balance falling.
- Rerun your payoff math each quarter and adjust the extra amount.
Paying back a HELOC is not about one perfect month. It’s about repeating a plan that keeps the balance moving down, even when rates move and life gets busy.
References & Sources
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).“What is a home equity line of credit (HELOC)?”Explains draw vs. repayment periods and notes that payments can rise or the balance may be due at the start of repayment.
- Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.“Interagency Guidance on Home Equity Lines of Credit Nearing Their End-of-Draw Periods.”Describes the draw-to-repayment transition and why planning ahead helps borrowers handle payment changes.
- Internal Revenue Service (IRS).“Publication 936, Home Mortgage Interest Deduction.”States when interest from home equity borrowing may be deductible, including the “buy, build, or improve” use rule.
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC).“Home Equity Loans and Home Equity Lines of Credit.”Explains key HELOC terms, disclosure requirements, and the risk of losing your home if you don’t repay as agreed.