When housing prices moon, some people get the bright idea: tap into home equity via HELOC (home equity line of credit) to invest or pay debts. Sounds smart on paper, right? Dave Ramsey thinks it’s “stupid” — and here’s why.
The core risk? Your home becomes collateral. Lose the investment bet, market tanks, or rates spike (HELOCs have variable rates), and you could lose everything. Not hypothetically — foreclosure is real.
Here’s the trap:
You borrow at low rates, rates climb, interest balloons
You pull out “a little extra,” suddenly owe way more than planned
The investment flops, but the debt stays
You use it as an emergency fund instead of actually building one
Ramsey’s harsh take: moving debt around isn’t paying it off. You’re just swapping stress for a different kind of stress — and risking your biggest asset for it.
The play? Skip the HELOC gamble. Build a real emergency fund. Stay debt-free. Boring beats broke.
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Why Using Your Home Equity as a Cash Machine Is a Risky Bet
When housing prices moon, some people get the bright idea: tap into home equity via HELOC (home equity line of credit) to invest or pay debts. Sounds smart on paper, right? Dave Ramsey thinks it’s “stupid” — and here’s why.
The core risk? Your home becomes collateral. Lose the investment bet, market tanks, or rates spike (HELOCs have variable rates), and you could lose everything. Not hypothetically — foreclosure is real.
Here’s the trap:
Ramsey’s harsh take: moving debt around isn’t paying it off. You’re just swapping stress for a different kind of stress — and risking your biggest asset for it.
The play? Skip the HELOC gamble. Build a real emergency fund. Stay debt-free. Boring beats broke.