Money Matters
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Cash-out refinance/HELOC/other options?
DH and I have been thinking of doing an entire outside sweep of the house- new siding for house and garage, new front door, new porch, new garage door, new columns for our side entrance. There is a local company that does everything and uses a type of siding that we're interested in. We haven't gotten an estimate yet, but I don't think I would be comfortable using the bulk of our savings account and we don't really want to do it in stages. Right now, we have a 15 year mortgage at 4%- balance is about $89,000. We had our house appraised in 2010 when we refinanced and it was $155,000... should be at least $180,000 now given other house sales in the area and other improvements that we've made (roof, gutters, sewer line, plumbing). I'm hoping this type of job is $30,000 or so, but I could be way off. If the job seems like a good option, does a cash-out refinance make the most sense given how low the rates are?
Re: Cash-out refinance/HELOC/other options?
I've done the $25K house renovation from cash savings before, and while it's great that we don't have any debt associated with it... I don't think I will do it that way again. We had saved about $30K for our project (so we had a 20% cushion), but I was still VERY stressed out about what would happen if our contractor went over.
If we had that $25-$30K in savings, but also had a HELOC for a similar amount, I wouldn't have been worried at all. HELOCs obviously have ceilings, but you only pay interest on what you draw, and the rate is typically pretty low. I wish we had had one as a back-stop before taking on a project that expensive.
I'm not debt adverse though, and when you are talking about that much money... I would rather borrow some of it (or at least have the ability to borrow some of it) than drain all my savings at once. Our contractor did not go over, so we still only paid about $25K. But when that check cleared, we saw over 80% of our "slush fund" leave our bank account at once. I'm not doing that again.
eek - that would make me cry.
I cried the first time a huge chunk of cash left my account like that - but it was for the downpayment! I like the idea of using a HELOC as a back-up for a renovation that I could pay in cash just to ease the anxiety.
I think HELOC's are the best thing since sliced bread. In fact, I would hazard to say that almost anyone who is in a position to be approved for one, should get one. As long as they plan to use the line wisely. Like @KAdams767 mentioned, they are incredibly flexible. If you never withdraw from it, you don't have any payments to make and no interest is accrued. But, if you need it, it's easy money to grab at a very low interest rate.
You can borrow from it and pay it back/pay some back over and over.
Banks are different. Some have an annual fee for HELOCs, some don't. Some charge an appraisal fee to the borrower, some don't. At my bank, the only fee I had to pay was the filing fee that the parish (county) charged. That was a one time fee. There are no annual fees. The bank did an appraisal, but they ate that cost themselves. HELOCs are typically a variable rate, but the rate is usually only slightly higher than whatever the current rate is for buying a home.
I replaced my wood siding with Hardie plank a few years ago. Yes, its more pricy, but it is a wonderful product that I highly recommend. That siding should last my house at least 25 years. It's very sturdy and very easy to paint on.
I'll be honest, I typically use a guy for my repairs who is an insured handyman...but not a contractor. That saves me substantial money then and now. It also allowed me to buy the siding myself. My house is about 2,000 square feet (one story) and I think just the siding materials (not labor) was $1700.
If your husband knows how to replace siding anyway, why don't you all not include that (or have it as a separate line item) and then possibly he can replace it himself. You all could use the savings to upgrade to Hardie.