Vermont · Pre-filled · Updated 2026
Vermont home equity loan calculator
Pre-filled for Vermont homeowners — median home value $405,000, typical 56% existing-mortgage LTV. Anchored on the state's three largest metros (Burlington, Essex, South Burlington) — adjust the home-value input live for your specific market. See your real Vermont HEL payment, full amortization, post-loan DTI, and underwriting verdict (APPROVED / MANUAL_UW / DENIED).
Vermont closing-cost notes
Typical mortgage recording fee in Vermont: $15-$50. Lender closing costs run ~2% of the loan amount on top of that.
State quirk: Vermont charges a 0.5% state Property Transfer Tax — HEL is generally exempt but the standard recording fee is mid-range.
Include your current mortgage payment, car loans, student loans, minimum credit card payments. Exclude utilities, groceries, insurance.
Likely APPROVED
Your CLTV, DTI, and equity all sit inside the auto-approve zones at every major HEL lender.
Monthly + total
Underwriting check
Fixed-rate · No closing costs
Discover Home Loans — From 7.99% APR
Fixed-rate home equity loan with zero application fee and zero closing costs. 10-30 year terms. Best for borrowers who want one predictable monthly payment.
Sponsored · We earn a commission if you complete a loan through this partner. No effect on your rate.
Yearly amortization
How your 10-year loan pays down. Year 1 is mostly interest; the principal share grows each year.
| Year | Annual payment | Principal paid | Interest paid | Remaining |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $5,926 | $2,667 | $3,259 | $37,333 |
| 2 | $5,926 | $2,900 | $3,026 | $34,434 |
| 3 | $5,926 | $3,153 | $2,773 | $31,281 |
| 4 | $5,926 | $3,428 | $2,498 | $27,853 |
| 5 | $5,926 | $3,727 | $2,198 | $24,125 |
| 6 | $5,926 | $4,053 | $1,873 | $20,073 |
| 7 | $5,926 | $4,407 | $1,519 | $15,666 |
| 8 | $5,926 | $4,791 | $1,134 | $10,874 |
| 9 | $5,926 | $5,210 | $716 | $5,665 |
| 10 | $5,926 | $5,665 | $261 | $0 |
Need to compare HEL with HELOC, cash-out refi, or personal loan?
HEL rates in Vermont are set by national rate sheets — the comparison is the same across all 50 states. Run all 4 products side-by-side with your numbers.
Open 4-product comparatorHEL calculators for other states
All 50 states are addressable — change the URL slug to your state name (lowercase, hyphenated).
A home equity loan is the most predictable way for Vermont homeowners to convert equity into renovation or other-purpose cash — fixed rate, fixed term, fixed monthly payment for 5/10/15 years. Below: how Vermont's housing market shapes your HEL strategy, the underwriting gates every national lender checks, and when this product beats its alternatives in Vermont.
How this calculator works
- Use a current home-value estimate — Vermont markets move at different speeds — pull a fresh Zestimate / Redfin estimate before applying. The calculator above is pre-filled with Vermont's median value ($405,000) but adjust to YOUR home's specific number.
- Pull the mortgage balance from your latest statement — Outstanding balance, not original principal. Lenders only care about what you still owe today.
- Cap requested HEL at 85% CLTV — For Vermont's median home, the ceiling is $344,250 combined. Subtract your mortgage to get your max HEL.
- Verify DTI fits below 43% — Lenders auto-decline above 43% back-end DTI. The calculator shows your post-loan DTI live so you can see whether you're cleared or need to reduce the loan amount.
- Pick the shortest term you can carry — 5-yr term = highest payment, lowest total interest. 15-yr term = lowest payment, most total interest. Don't stretch term to fund a higher loan amount — DTI gates that path.
When to use this vs. skip it
You're a Vermont homeowner with a known renovation budget
HEL gives you lump-sum + fixed payment certainty — ideal when the project scope is locked.
Your existing mortgage is at a sub-6% rate
HEL is a second lien — your primary rate is untouched. Cash-out refi would force you to reset the whole balance to today's higher rate.
Your project is multi-stage across 12-24 months
HELOC's draw-period flexibility likely beats HEL — you won't pay interest on undrawn balance.
Your CLTV is already above 80%
You'll bump the 85% cap fast. Look at unsecured personal loans or wait for home value to appreciate.
Common mistakes homeowners make
- ×Assuming Vermont has different HEL rates than other states. It doesn't — national rate sheets, adjusted by credit score only.
- ×Treating HEL and HELOC as interchangeable — HEL is fixed + lump sum, HELOC is variable + revolving.
- ×Forgetting closing costs (~2%) come out of HEL proceeds — borrow $40K, net ~$39,200.
- ×Maxing out CLTV at 85% with no margin for home-value dips — stop at 75-80% if you can.
- ×Banking on tax deduction without verifying renovation use-of-funds.
Last updated · Reviewed by the HavenCostGuide methodology desk