Personal Loan vs. Home Equity Loan: Key Differences in 2026
A home equity loan and a personal loan look identical on the surface β both disburse a fixed lump sum, both carry a fixed interest rate, both have a defined repayment term. The structural difference is what separates them: one uses your home as collateral, the other doesn't. That single distinction ripples through the rate, the approval timeline, the closing costs, the loan ceiling, the tax treatment, and the worst-case consequence of default. For homeowners, this is not a minor product choice β it is a decision about how much risk to place on their most valuable asset. This guide maps every dimension of the comparison using Federal Reserve, IRS, and CFPB data so you can make the decision that's financially and structurally right for your situation.
A home equity loan wins on rate and loan size for homeowners with substantial equity who need $25,000+ for a purpose justified by that collateral risk. A personal loan wins on speed, zero collateral risk, no closing costs, and accessibility for non-homeowners or homeowners with insufficient equity. The critical question to ask before choosing a home equity loan: "Is this purpose worth placing a lien on my home?" Debt consolidation, vacations, and consumer purchases rarely justify that risk. Major home improvements, where the loan directly increases the home's value, often do. Compare personal loan rates from SoFi, LightStream, and Upstart β all reviewed on Global Loan Advisor's homepage β before engaging a home equity lender.
Full Side-by-Side Comparison β 16 Dimensions
Every key difference between a personal loan and a home equity loan, using Federal Reserve H.15, G.19, CFPB, and IRS data verified April 2026.
| Dimension | π³ Personal Loan | π Home Equity Loan |
|---|---|---|
| Average rate (Q1 2026) | 11.65% β Fed G.19 | 8.38% β Fed H.15 (15-yr fixed) |
| Rate type | Fixed β locked for full term | Fixed β also fully fixed (unlike HELOC) |
| Collateral | None β unsecured | Home equity β lien placed on property |
| Foreclosure risk on default | No | Yes β lender can foreclose |
| Approval-to-funding time | 1β5 business days | 2β6 weeks (appraisal, title, underwriting) |
| Closing costs | $0 β SoFi, LightStream, Marcus, Discover | 2%β5% of loan amount ($1,000β$6,000 on $50K) |
| Home ownership required | No | Yes β and typically 15%β20% equity minimum |
| Maximum loan amount | $1Kβ$100K (lender-dependent) | Up to 80β85% of home equity β often $100Kβ$500K+ |
| Loan structure | Lump sum β disbursed once | Lump sum β disbursed once (same as personal loan) |
| Repayment structure | Fixed monthly payment β fully amortizing | Fixed monthly payment β fully amortizing |
| Interest tax deductibility | No | Yes β if used for qualifying home improvement (IRC Β§163(h)) |
| Credit utilization impact | Not counted β installment debt excluded | Not counted β also installment debt, excluded |
| Minimum credit score | 300+ (Upstart); 660+ for best rates | 620β680 minimum; 720+ for best rates |
| DTI requirement | Typically below 43% | Typically below 43β45% (lender-dependent) |
| Soft-pull pre-qualification | Yes β SoFi, LightStream, Marcus | Usually no β full application and appraisal required |
| Best total cost scenario | Speed, no collateral risk, non-homeowners, smaller amounts | Large amounts, home improvement, lower rate priority |
Unlike the personal loan vs. HELOC comparison (Article 82), both a personal loan and a home equity loan share the same disbursement structure: a fixed lump sum, disbursed once, repaid in fixed monthly installments over a fixed term. This means the only genuine structural differences are rate, collateral, closing costs, and timeline. There is no revolving draw advantage for the home equity loan (that belongs to the HELOC). The home equity loan's advantage is purely: lower rate + higher loan ceiling + possible tax deductibility. The personal loan's advantage is purely: no collateral + faster funding + no closing costs + available to non-homeowners. The decision reduces to whether the home equity loan's rate and size advantages outweigh its collateral risk and overhead for your specific need.
True Cost Comparison β Rate Gap, Closing Costs, and Tax Deductibility
The 3.27-point rate gap (8.38% home equity loan vs. 11.65% personal loan) is meaningful on large balances over long terms β but the home equity loan's closing costs and approval overhead change the true cost comparison significantly for smaller amounts and shorter terms.
| Product & Scenario | Rate | Monthly Payment | Total Interest | Closing Costs | True Total Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Loan β Excellent Credit | 8.99% | $830/mo | $9,800 | $0 | $49,800 |
| Personal Loan β Average Rate | 11.65% | $882/mo | $12,920 | $0 | $52,920 |
| Personal Loan β Fair Credit | 18% | $1,015/mo | $20,900 | $0 | $60,900 |
| Home Equity Loan β Avg Rate + Low Costs | 8.38% | $821/mo | $9,260 | $2,000 | $51,260 |
| Home Equity Loan β Avg Rate + High Costs | 8.38% | $821/mo | $9,260 | $3,500 | $52,760 |
| HE Loan β After-Tax (24% bracket, home impr.) | 8.38% β ~6.37% eff. | $821/mo | ~$7,038 after-tax | $2,000 | ~$49,038 eff. |
The table produces a counterintuitive finding that most comparison guides miss: for an excellent-credit borrower at 8.99% APR, a personal loan from LightStream or SoFi costs less in true total cost than a home equity loan with average closing costs ($2,000β$3,500) over 60 months. The $9,800 in personal loan interest vs. $9,260 in home equity loan interest β a $540 difference β is wiped out by $2,000+ in closing costs. The home equity loan only produces a net true cost savings over a personal loan when: (a) the closing costs are minimal, (b) the term is longer than 5 years, (c) the borrower qualifies for higher personal loan rates (fair credit tier), or (d) the tax deduction on qualifying home improvement applies.
Break-even term = Closing Costs Γ· Monthly Interest Savings. On a $40,000 loan, the monthly interest savings between 8.38% HE loan and 11.65% personal loan is approximately (12,920 β 9,260) / 60 = $61/month. With $2,000 in closing costs: break-even = $2,000 / $61 = 33 months. With $3,500 in closing costs: break-even = 57 months β nearly the entire 60-month term. Unless you hold the home equity loan for at least the break-even term, you would have been better off with a personal loan. For loans under $20,000 or terms under 36 months, the break-even rarely works in the home equity loan's favor after closing costs.
8 Scenarios β When Each Product Is the Right Choice
The Home Equity Loan vs. HELOC Distinction β Which Secured Product Fits?
Homeowners choosing secured borrowing face a second decision: home equity loan (fixed-rate lump sum) vs. HELOC (variable-rate revolving line). This is covered in detail in Article 82 β Personal Loan vs. HELOC, but the key distinction for this article's context is important: the home equity loan and personal loan are structurally more similar to each other than either is to a HELOC.
| Feature | Personal Loan | Home Equity Loan | HELOC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rate type | Fixed | Fixed | Variable |
| Disbursement | Lump sum | Lump sum | Revolving draw |
| Collateral | None | Home | Home |
| Avg rate (Q1 2026) | 11.65% | 8.38% | 8.45% |
| Closing costs | $0 | 2%β5% | 1%β3% |
| Rate variability risk | None | None | High β moves with Prime |
| Best for | Speed, no collateral, renters | Large fixed need, long term | Phased projects, ongoing draws |
The home equity loan and HELOC offer similar rates but differ fundamentally in structure. For a borrower who knows the exact amount needed upfront (single renovation project, large debt payoff), the home equity loan's fixed disbursement and fixed rate are more appropriate than a HELOC. For a borrower whose needs are phased or variable over time (ongoing renovation, business working capital), the HELOC's revolving structure fits better despite its variable rate risk.
Both the home equity loan and HELOC place a lien on your home. Default on either can result in foreclosure. This risk is often underweighted in rate-focused comparison articles, which present the lower rate as a clear win without acknowledging what it costs in structural terms. The home equity loan's rate advantage is real β but it is a payment for taking on foreclosure risk. For any purpose where that risk is not justified by the loan's purpose (home improvement that increases the home's value is the clearest justification), a borrower is trading significant downside risk for modest monthly payment savings. A $200/month payment difference on a $40,000 loan does not justify foreclosure risk for most households. Run the break-even calculation from Section 2 and then ask: "Is the net savings worth placing a lien on this home?"
Best Personal Loan Lenders for Homeowners Who Choose Unsecured
If you've determined a personal loan is the right choice β speed, no collateral risk, short-to-medium term, or insufficient equity β these lenders offer the most competitive rates for homeowners who would otherwise consider a home equity loan. All three homepage lenders at Global Loan Advisor β SoFi, LightStream, and Upstart β cover the full credit spectrum.
| Lender | APR Range | Loan Amount | Min Credit | Origination Fee | Funding | Advantage vs. HE Loan |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LightStream | 6.99β25.49% | $5Kβ$100K | 660+ | None | Same day | 6.99% closes gap with HE loan rate + zero closing costs + same-day funding |
| SoFi | 8.99β29.99% | $5Kβ$100K | Not specified | None | Same day | 8.99% nearly matches HE loan avg, no collateral, unemployment protection |
| Marcus (Goldman Sachs) | 6.99β24.99% | $3.5Kβ$40K | Not specified | None | 1β4 days | Zero fees; competitive rate for mid-size amounts where HE closing costs are prohibitive |
| Discover | 7.99β24.99% | $2.5Kβ$35K | Not specified | None | Next day | Smaller amounts ($5Kβ$25K) where HE loan overhead exceeds any interest savings |
| Upstart | 7.80β35.99% | $1Kβ$50K | 300+ | 0β12% | Next day | Fair-credit homeowners who don't want collateral risk despite qualifying for HE loan |
| Federal Credit Union | Capped 18% | Varies | Varies | Minimal | 3β7 days | NCUA 18% cap makes CU competitive with fair-credit personal loan market, no collateral |
For borrowers with 720+ FICO, LightStream's starting rate of 6.99% is lower than the average home equity loan rate of 8.38%. This creates the rare scenario where the personal loan wins on every dimension simultaneously: lower rate, zero collateral risk, zero closing costs, and same-day funding. On a $40,000 loan over 60 months, LightStream at 6.99% costs $7,960 in total interest vs. $9,260 + $2,000 closing costs = $11,260 for the average home equity loan. The personal loan is $3,300 cheaper with no lien on the borrower's home. This outcome is available only to excellent-credit borrowers β but it illustrates that the home equity loan's rate advantage is not universal. Full review: LightStream Personal Loan Review 2026 (Article 101). Browse all 40+ lenders at Global Loan Advisor's lender comparison.
Frequently Asked Questions
- [1] Federal Reserve β H.15 Selected Interest Rates, Q1 2026. Average home equity loan rate 8.38% (15-year fixed); home equity line rate 8.45%; historical rate data 2020β2026; bank lending benchmarks. federalreserve.gov
- [2] Federal Reserve β G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release, Q1 2026. Average personal loan APR 11.65%; consumer installment credit benchmarks; non-revolving credit outstanding. federalreserve.gov
- [3] Federal Reserve β Flow of Funds (Z.1) Q4 2025. Total U.S. homeowner equity $35.8T; home equity loan and HELOC balances outstanding; household net worth by asset class. federalreserve.gov/z1
- [4] Consumer Financial Protection Bureau β TRID / Mortgage Closing Disclosure Data 2025. Home equity loan closing cost ranges (2%β5% of loan amount); average closing costs by loan size; appraisal and title search cost data. consumerfinance.gov
- [5] IRS β Publication 936: Home Mortgage Interest Deduction 2025. IRC Β§163(h) home equity loan interest deductibility criteria; $750,000 acquisition and improvement debt limit; "buy, build, or substantially improve" qualifying use requirement; standard deduction thresholds 2026. irs.gov/publications/p936
- [6] Consumer Financial Protection Bureau β HELOC and Home Equity Loan Regulations (12 C.F.R. Β§1026.40). Collateral lien requirements; foreclosure trigger conditions; right-of-rescission 3-day requirement; disclosure obligations. consumerfinance.gov
- [7] NCUA β Q4 2025 Credit Union Data Summary. Federal credit union 18% APR cap on personal loans (12 C.F.R. Β§ 701.21); average credit union personal loan rate ~9.8%; credit union home equity product rate comparison. ncua.gov
- [8] myFICO / FICO β Credit Score Factors. Credit utilization ratio calculation β installment debt (personal loan, home equity loan) excluded; revolving debt (HELOC, credit card) included; hard inquiry impact β3 to β5 points. myfico.com
- [9] Freddie Mac β Primary Mortgage Market Survey (PMMS) Q1 2026. Mortgage rate benchmarks used to contextualize home equity loan rates; LTV and underwriting standard data for home equity products. freddiemac.com/pmms
- [10] Individual Lender Disclosure Pages β LightStream, SoFi, Marcus by Goldman Sachs, Discover, Upstart (verified April 2026). APR ranges, loan amounts, origination fee policies, minimum credit requirements, and funding timelines cited directly from each lender's public product disclosure pages.