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Updated about 16 hours ago on . Most recent reply

User Stats

10
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3
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Justin Bartram
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Ashland, KY
3
Votes |
10
Posts

Refinance to HELOC for flips?

Justin Bartram
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Ashland, KY
Posted

My wife and I used to be involved in real estate with long term rentals and creative airbnbs. We’ve taken about 3 years off after quitting my job (back to work now) and have paid off around 90% of our debt.

We are considering refinancing our home to draw out more equity and begin flipping. When it's all said and done, without the HELOC we will lower our current mortgage payment after tying in an already open HELOC.

Refinancing would give us around 40ish thousand equity we can draw with 80% equity loan. 

Given where we live this is enough to reach out to larger name hard money lenders or a local lender we have family ties to, to get us started.

Given our very low DTI we can comfortable cash flow the HELOC and any overages on rehab for the first few, aiming for minimal rehab, smaller profits, roll the profit back into the mortgage wash rinse repeat for a few until we have substantial cash reserves.

What would some pros/cons of doing this be? Of course having our home tied to it all would be first and foremost but my income would more than cover any emergency that would arise especially with having just our mortgage as our only debt. 

Just thinking out loud and weighing some options

Most Popular Reply

User Stats

434
Posts
200
Votes
Arman Ahmed
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus, OH
200
Votes |
434
Posts
Arman Ahmed
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus, OH
Replied

@Justin Bartram

Hey Justin, sounds like you've got a solid plan and I like the approach of leveraging your equity to scale your flips carefully. A few things to consider: using your home as collateral is powerful but adds risk, so keeping reserves for unexpected rehab costs or vacancies is key. Also, make sure your HELOC terms align with your rehab timelines—some lenders require quicker payback than you might expect. Many investors I work with in the Midwest find this strategy works well when paired with reliable local contractors and a good project management plan, so your rehab profits stay predictable. Overall, your low DTI gives you flexibility, but always run stress tests on your numbers to make sure a few hiccups won't derail the plan.

  • Arman Ahmed
  • [email protected]
  • 614-418-6081
  • Loading replies...