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Federally-Insured Loans

Growing Creditlines

The Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) program gives the most choices in how you can get your cash from a reverse mortgage. You can take all of your loan as:

  • a single lump sum of cash; or as
  • a "creditline" account of a specific dollar amount that you control; you decide when to make a cash withdrawal from this account and how much cash to withdraw; or as
  • a monthly cash advance for a specific period of time, or a monthly advance for as long as you live in your home.

In addition, you can choose any combination of these options, and you can change your choices at any future time.

Loan Amounts

The amount of cash you can get depends on your age, current interest rates, and your home's value. The older you are, the more cash you can get. If there is more than one owner, the age of the youngest owner is the one that counts. The lower interest rates are when the loan closes, the more money you can get. You can also get more money from a lender who charges lower loan fees.

In general, the more your house is worth (its appraised value), the more money you can get. But Section 203-b of the National Housing Act sets home value limits by county. In 2006 and 2007, these "203-b" limits range from $200,160 in most non-metro areas to $362,790 in many urban areas. These limits are subject to change at least annually, and HUD is studying whether to set one national limit for all HECM loans.

If your home is worth more than the limit for your county, you are still eligible for a HECM loan. But the amount of money you can get is based on your county limit, not on your home's actual value. For example, if your home is valued at $200,000 and your county limit is $175,000, then your cash advances are the same as they would be if your home were valued at $175,000.

The amount of money you can get from a HECM loan also depends on how you want it paid to you: lump sum, creditline, monthly advance, or some combination of these three types of cash advances.

Loan Amount Examples

The table below shows how much you could get from a HECM if you take it all as a single lump sum of cash at closing or as a creditline:

  • if the value of your home (or the 203-b limit in your county, whichever is less) is $150,000, $200,000, or $250,000;
  • if the expected interest rate on the loan is 6%, 7%, or 8%;
  • if the age of the youngest borrower at closing is 65, 70, 75, 80, 85, or 90; and
  • if the servicing fee is $30, closing costs are $2,000, and the origination fee is 2% of your home value or 203-b limit, whichever is less.
Home Value Age Lump sum or creditline when expected rate is:
6% 7% 8%
$150,000 65 $75,657 $60,873 $48,705
70 83,077 69,733 58,121
75 90,882 79,265 68,798
80 99,104 89,353 80,169
85 107,337 99,444 91,832
90 115,193 109,157 103,113
$200,000 65 $103,207 $83,323 $66,955
70 113,027 95,083 79.471
75 123,332 107,715 93,648
80 134,154 121,053 108,719
85 144,937 134,344 124,132
90 155,143 147,057 138,963
$250,000 65 $130,757 $105,772 $85,204
70 142,977 120,432 100,820
75 155,782 136,165 118,497
80 169,204 152,752 137,268
85 182,537 169,243 156,431
90 195,093 184,956 174,813

You can divide the amounts in the table between a lump sum and a creditline. For example, a 75-year-old borrower living in a $200,000 home getting a HECM loan at 7% expected interest could select:

  • a lump sum or creditline of $107,715; or
  • any combination of lump sum and creditline that totals $107,715, for example, a lump sum of $20,000 and a creditline of $87,715.

The Reverse Mortgage Calculators give you an estimate of HECM cash benefits based on your age, home value, 203-b limit, and current interest rates.

Creditline Growth

Perhaps the most attractive HECM feature is that its creditline grows larger over time. This means that the amount of cash available to you increases until you withdraw all of it.

For example, if the creditline equals $100,000 and you withdraw $20,000, you would have $80,000 left. But if your next withdrawal is one year later, you would then have more than $80,000 left — because the $80,000 grows larger by the same total rate* being charged on your loan balance. If that rate were to equal 6% per year, for example, your available creditline one year later would be $84,800 (6% x $80,000 = $4,800).

So a growing HECM creditline can give you a lot more total cash than a creditline that does not grow. The HECM creditline grows larger every month until you withdraw the last of your money. The Reverse Mortgage Calculators can estimate how much cash would remain in a HECM versus a non-growing creditline.

HECM creditline growth means that taking a large lump sum of cash from a HECM and putting it into savings or most investments is not wise. If you did that, you would be charged interest on the full amount of the HECM lump sum. If you leave the money in the creditline, you avoid substantial interest charges. You also end up with more available cash, since your creditline grows larger at a greater rate than a savings account or safe investments are likely to grow.


*The rate at which a HECM creditline grows each month equals the current interest rate being charged on the loan plus one-half of one percentage point, divided by twelve. So if the interest rate this month is 5.5%, the creditline would grow by 0.5% (5.5% + 0.5% = 6%/12 = 0.5%). If you had a creditline of $80,000 at the start of the month, it would equal $80,400 at the end (0.5% X $80,000 = $400).

AARP does not endorse any reverse mortgage lender or product.

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