Tap Home Equity After a Divorce
Wondering about tap home equity after a divorce in 2026? Here is exactly how lenders treat this — the rules, the limits, and your smartest move.
The short answer
During or after a divorce, equity is commonly tapped so one spouse can buy out the other's share of the home, often through a cash-out refinance that also removes the departing spouse from the loan. The refinance qualifies on the remaining owner's income and credit alone, and an equity buyout is usually capped at the standard 80% cash-out LTV.
What home equity lenders look for
- Equity: keep at least 15-20% — combined loan-to-value caps near 85% (cash-out at 80%).
- Credit: roughly 620+ to qualify; 680+ unlocks the best HELOC pricing.
- Debt-to-income: generally under ~43-50% including the new payment.
- The right tool: a HELOC or home equity loan keeps your first mortgage; a cash-out refinance replaces it.
Your next steps
Estimate your value and current balance to gauge equity, pull your credit, and get quotes from two or three lenders the same day. Then choose the product that fits — flexible (HELOC), fixed lump sum (home equity loan), or full refinance (cash-out).
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Frequently Asked Questions
- Tap Home Equity After a Divorce — is it possible in 2026?
- During or after a divorce, equity is commonly tapped so one spouse can buy out the other's share of the home, often through a cash-out refinance that also removes the departing spouse from the loan. The refinance qualifies on the remaining owner's income and credit alone, and an equity buyout is usually capped at the standard 80% cash-out LTV.
- How much equity do I need?
- Most home equity lenders cap combined loan-to-value at about 85% (cash-out at 80%), so you generally need to keep at least 15-20% equity in the home.
- Will it touch my first mortgage?
- A HELOC or home equity loan sits behind your existing mortgage and leaves its rate alone. Only a cash-out refinance replaces your first mortgage.