Homeowners with high-interest debt sometimes consider a cash-out refinance — replacing their existing mortgage with a larger one and pocketing the difference to pay off debt. It’s a bigger, slower move than a personal loan, and it’s not right for everyone. Here’s how the two compare.
This article is general information, not personalized financial advice.
The Two Options at a Glance
| Cash-Out Refinance | Personal Loan | |
|---|---|---|
| Collateral | Your home, via a new first mortgage | None (unsecured) or a specific asset (secured) |
| Rate structure | Typically fixed, tied to current mortgage rates | Fixed, tied to personal loan market rates |
| Closing costs | Often 2%–5% of the new loan amount | Origination fee, often 0%–8% of loan amount |
| Time to fund | Often 30–45 days, involves appraisal and underwriting | Often 1–5 business days |
| Repayment term | Resets to a new mortgage term, often 15–30 years | Typically 2–7 years |
| Risk if you default | Foreclosure | Collections, credit damage, possible lawsuit |
Current Rate Comparison (2026)
| Product | Typical Rate |
|---|---|
| Cash-out refinance | Roughly in line with prevailing mortgage rates, often ~6.5%–8% depending on credit and loan-to-value |
| Personal loan, good credit | ~15% – 19% |
| Personal loan, excellent credit | ~6% – 15% |
| Average credit card APR | ~20% – 25%+ |
A cash-out refinance often carries a lower rate than even a strong personal loan offer — but the comparison isn’t just about rate, since a refinance replaces your entire existing mortgage, not just the amount you’re pulling out.
When a Cash-Out Refinance Wins
A cash-out refinance tends to make sense when:
- You have significant equity and a large debt balance that would take years to pay off with a personal loan’s shorter term.
- Current mortgage rates are close to, or lower than, your existing mortgage rate. If refinancing would raise your existing mortgage rate substantially, the math changes — you’re not just financing the cash-out amount, you’re refinancing your entire home loan at a new rate.
- You want the lowest possible rate on the debt portion and are comfortable extending your mortgage timeline and consolidating that debt into a long-term, secured loan.
- You plan to stay in the home long enough to make the closing costs worthwhile. Closing costs on a refinance are a real, often-overlooked expense that needs to be weighed against the interest savings.
When a Personal Loan Wins
A personal loan tends to be the better choice when:
- Your existing mortgage rate is well below current market rates. Refinancing the entire mortgage just to access a smaller amount of cash can mean losing a much better rate on the rest of your balance — often the single biggest reason to avoid a cash-out refinance in a higher-rate environment.
- You need funds quickly. A personal loan can fund in days; a refinance typically takes over a month.
- The debt amount is relatively modest. Paying refinance closing costs (often thousands of dollars) to access a smaller cash-out amount rarely makes sense.
- You don’t want to extend your mortgage timeline or put your home at risk for debt that could be resolved with an unsecured loan instead.
The “Mortgage Rate Lock-In” Problem
This is the single biggest factor working against cash-out refinancing right now for many homeowners: if you locked in a mortgage rate meaningfully below current market rates, a cash-out refinance means refinancing your entire loan balance at today’s rate — not just the new cash you’re pulling out. Losing a well-below-market rate on, say, a $300,000 remaining balance to access $20,000 in cash can cost far more in increased interest over time than the $20,000 was ever going to cost via a personal loan, even at a higher personal-loan rate. This makes the “compare the two rates” framing incomplete — the relevant comparison is often the blended cost of refinancing your whole mortgage versus keeping it and taking a separate personal loan.
Side-by-Side Cost Example
Say you have a $250,000 mortgage balance at a 4% rate (locked in previously), and you want to pull out $30,000 to pay off debt.
Option A — Cash-out refinance to a $280,000 mortgage at a current market rate of 7%: you’re not just paying 7% on the new $30,000 — you’re now paying 7% instead of 4% on the entire $280,000, which over a 30-year term can add tens of thousands of dollars in interest compared to keeping your original 4% mortgage, even after accounting for the debt payoff benefit.
Option B — Personal loan for $30,000, 5-year term, 14% APR: total interest ≈ $11,600, and your existing 4% mortgage stays untouched.
In this scenario — a large existing rate gap between your current mortgage and today’s market — the personal loan is very likely cheaper overall, despite its higher headline rate, because it doesn’t disturb the much larger, much cheaper mortgage balance.
Option C — No existing rate advantage (say your current mortgage is already at 7%, similar to today’s market): here, a cash-out refinance to access $30,000 at ~7% can be meaningfully cheaper than a 14% personal loan, since there’s no “lock-in” being sacrificed.
Questions to Ask Yourself Before Choosing
- What’s my current mortgage rate compared to today’s market rate? A large gap strongly favors a personal loan over a refinance.
- How much equity do I have, and does the debt amount justify refinance closing costs?
- How quickly do I need the funds? A personal loan is dramatically faster.
- Am I comfortable extending my mortgage repayment timeline to consolidate debt into a 15- or 30-year secured loan?
- Have I calculated the blended cost of refinancing my entire mortgage, not just the rate on the new cash-out portion?
Mistakes to Avoid With Either Option
- Comparing only the cash-out refinance rate against the personal loan rate, without accounting for what happens to the rest of your existing mortgage balance.
- Ignoring closing costs, which can erase much of the interest savings on a smaller cash-out amount.
- Extending your mortgage term significantly to pay off a relatively small debt, turning short-term debt into decades of additional interest.
- Not checking whether your current mortgage rate is below market before assuming a refinance is automatically cheaper.
- Using either option to pay off debt without addressing the spending habits that created it, which risks ending up with new unsecured debt on top of a refinanced or expanded loan.
Bottom Line
A cash-out refinance can offer a lower rate on debt payoff, but only makes sense once you account for what happens to your entire existing mortgage balance — if you have a well-below-market rate locked in, refinancing to access relatively modest cash can cost more overall than a higher-rate personal loan. A personal loan is faster, doesn’t touch your mortgage, and is often the better choice for moderate debt amounts or when your existing mortgage rate is a rate worth protecting. Run the blended math before assuming the lower headline rate is the cheaper option. This article is general information, not a personalized recommendation.