For many women over 60, the home is more than just a place to live. It’s security, memories, and often the single largest financial asset. As living costs, healthcare expenses, and family responsibilities grow, it’s natural to look at that home and think, Is there a way to use some of this value without giving up my stability?
Two common tools for turning home equity into usable funds are the Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) and the Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM), often called a reverse mortgage. On the surface they can look similar, both let you draw on your home’s value – but under the hood they work very differently, especially when you’re retired and on a fixed income.
This is where one woman’s story can bring the differences to life.
Susan’s Story: A 67-Year-Old Homeowner in a High-Cost Area
Susan (not her real name) is 67 and widowed. She worked as a teacher for many years and now lives in a paid-off home in a high-price market. Her house has done very well over time; its value has climbed, but Susan’s monthly income has not. Between Social Security, a small pension, and modest retirement savings, she’s comfortable – but only as long as nothing big goes wrong.
Like many women her age, Susan wants two things that seem to pull in opposite directions: she wants to stay in her home, and she wants some extra financial breathing room. Rising utilities, property taxes, and everyday costs are wearing on her. She doesn’t want to move, and she doesn’t want to feel forced to ask her children for help.
Her bank suggested a HELOC, a home equity line of credit. Around the same time, a friend told her about a reverse mortgage line of credit. Both sounded like ways to act as a cushion, something she could draw on when needed. What Susan discovered, though, was that the way these tools behave over time is very different, especially when you’re retired.
How a HELOC Works in Retirement
A HELOC is a familiar tool to many homeowners. It works a bit like a credit card secured by your home. You’re approved for a certain limit, and you can borrow against that amount as needs arise. During the “draw period,” which often lasts about 10 years, you make monthly payments based on the interest rate and how much you’ve borrowed.
When Susan looked at the numbers, the HELOC seemed attractive at first. The upfront costs were relatively low, and the interest rate looked reasonable. But there were strings attached that mattered a lot for someone on a fixed income.
First, the payments would start right away and could increase if interest rates went up. That meant her monthly obligation wasn’t fixed and could easily grow over time. Second, the bank had the right to freeze or reduce the line in the future if market conditions changed. In other words, the HELOC would give Susan access to cash, but it would also create a new bill each month and introduce uncertainty about future payments and availability.
For a younger homeowner still working full-time, that trade-off might be acceptable. For Susan, it raised an important question: “What happens if my income stays the same but my payment doubles?”
How a HECM Reverse Mortgage Line of Credit Is Different
The reverse mortgage line of credit, technically a HECM, is designed specifically for homeowners age 62 and older. It is an FHA-insured loan that allows you to tap your home equity without taking on a required monthly mortgage payment.
With a HECM line of credit, the loan is secured by your home just like any other mortgage, but there are several key differences. As long as you live in the home, keep up with property taxes, homeowner’s insurance, and basic maintenance, you are not required to make monthly payments toward principal and interest. You can choose to make voluntary payments, but you are not obligated to do so.
The second major difference is that the available credit line can grow over time. Any portion of the HECM line of credit that you don’t use can increase each year according to the program’s terms, even if your home value doesn’t change. For someone like Susan, this means her “safety net” can actually become larger as she ages, rather than staying flat.
Finally, HECMs are non-recourse loans. That means when the loan eventually becomes due – usually when the homeowner sells the property, moves out permanently, or passes away – the amount owed will never exceed the value of the home at that time. If home values fall, the FHA insurance steps in, not the family’s other assets.
Interest Rates and Peace of Mind
Interest rates are a big part of Susan’s decision. With a HELOC, rising rates almost always mean rising payments. The monthly bill can increase while your income stays the same, which is a stressful combination for many retirees.
A reverse mortgage behaves differently. The interest rate on a HECM can be fixed or adjustable, but even if it rises, you are still not required to make monthly mortgage payments. The interest is added to the loan balance over time instead of being paid each month out of your pocket. You still must pay taxes, insurance, and maintain the home, but you are protected from the kind of payment shock that a HELOC can create.
For women who are managing retirement on a fixed or modest income, this difference is more than just a technical detail. It can be the difference between lying awake wondering how to cover next month’s bill and knowing that, while the loan balance may grow, your monthly cash-flow obligations won’t suddenly jump because of a rate hike.
Looking at the Trade-Offs
None of this makes a HECM automatically “better” than a HELOC. The right choice depends on priorities.
Someone who wants to borrow, repay quickly, and preserve as much equity as possible for heirs might prefer a traditional HELOC and accept the payments that come with it. Someone who values stability, flexibility, and the ability to stay in her home without adding a new required monthly payment may find that a reverse mortgage line of credit better supports her lifestyle and emotional well-being.
What matters is understanding that these are not interchangeable products. They manage risk very differently. The HELOC shifts more risk onto your monthly budget, while the HECM shifts more of that risk into the long-term loan balance and into the FHA insurance system.
Questions to Consider
If you’re a woman over 60 and wondering which option might be right for you, it can help to reflect on a few simple questions:
- How long do I realistically want to stay in this home?
- Is it more important to me to avoid new monthly payments, or to keep the loan balance as low as possible?
- How comfortable am I with interest rates going up and my payments changing?
- Have I talked with my children or other heirs about my priorities and what matters most?
You don’t need to know all the technical details to have a meaningful conversation with a counselor or advisor. You just need to be clear about what you value most: peace of mind, flexibility, legacy, or some combination of all three.
Susan’s Outcome – and What It Might Mean for You
In Susan’s case, after talking with a HUD-approved counselor and taking time to think through her long-term plans, she chose the HECM line of credit. For her, not having a new monthly payment – and knowing that her credit line could grow overtime felt like the right kind of security.
Her choice doesn’t mean a reverse mortgage is always the answer. But her story shows how women 60+ in high-price markets can look beyond the surface labels and ask, “Which tool actually matches the way I live, spend, and sleep at night?”
Your home is more than just a number on a statement. Used wisely, it can support your independence, your dignity, and your ability to shape the later chapters of your life on your terms. When you have time be sure to check out our Free HECM Calculator.
Let’s Have a Conversation:
What’s your biggest monthly bill? How often do you stay up worrying about making do with the income you have? Have you looked into financing options that use your home equity as a line of credit?