HELOC Rate Forecast 2026
HELOC rates are tied to the prime rate, which moves with Federal Reserve policy. Here’s what to expect in 2026.
Current HELOC Rate Environment (March 2026)
- Prime Rate: 8.5%
- Typical HELOC Rate: Prime + 0.5-1.5% = 9-10%
- Compared to fixed mortgages: 1-2% higher than 30-year fixed
2026 Rate Forecast
Economic Context
- Inflation has moderated but remains above Fed target
- Labor market shows signs of cooling
- Fed signal: rate cuts possible in H2 2026
Forecast Scenarios
| Scenario | Likelihood | Year-End Prime Rate | HELOC Rate Implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bull Case (cuts come early) | 25% | 7.0-7.5% | HELOCs at 7.5-8.5% |
| Base Case (gradual cuts) | 50% | 7.5-8.0% | HELOCs at 8-9% |
| Bear Case (rates hold) | 25% | 8.5-9.0% | HELOCs at 9-10% |
Bottom line: HELOC rates likely to end 2026 at 8-9%, down 1-2% from current levels.
What This Means for Borrowers
If You’re Borrowing Now
HELOC at 9% (prime + 0.5%):
- By year-end: Could drop to 8-8.5%
- Savings: $25-$40/month on $50k balance
- Verdict: If you need flexibility now, go ahead—rate relief likely coming
If You’re Comparing HELOC vs. Refinance
March 2026 snapshot:
- 30-year fixed refinance: 6.5-6.75%
- HELOC: 9-10%
Decision:
- If you’re borrowing for 10+ years: Fixed refinance rate is attractive
- If you’re borrowing short-term (1-3 years): HELOC likely wins (rate cuts coming)
- Our calculator helps you compare
Rate Hedging Strategies
Strategy 1: HELOC + Plan to Refinance
- Take HELOC now at 9%
- If rates drop 1-2%: Consider converting to fixed-rate home equity loan
- Or refinance entire mortgage when rates are lower
Strategy 2: HELOC with Fixed-Rate Conversion
- Some lenders let you lock a portion as fixed
- Draw now at variable, convert portion later if rates rise
Strategy 3: Cash-Out Refinance
- Lock in 6.5-6.75% fixed for 30 years
- Insurance against rising rates
- Trade-off: Higher closing costs, term reset
Historical Context
Recent HELOC rate history:
- 2020-2021: 4-5% (historic lows)
- 2022: Rapidly rose to 7-8%
- 2023-2024: Peaked at 9-10%
- 2025-2026 (forecast): Gradual decline to 7-8%
Variable vs. Fixed Decision
With rates expected to decline:
Variable (HELOC) makes sense if:
- You can afford current payments
- You might pay off early
- You believe rates will fall (base case agrees)
Fixed (refinance) makes sense if:
- You want payment certainty
- You’re borrowing long-term
- You’re worried rates could stay high
Our Calculator Helps
Use our stress test feature to see:
- Your payment at current rates
- Your payment if HELOC rate rises 1%
- Comparison to fixed-rate refinance
- Break-even analysis