I have been in my house since 2019. It's small. My family is outgrowing it. rnCurrent house was $110k. Have about 75k left. Our mortgage is awesome. ~$800/mo. 4% interest rate. I am terrified of being house poor. We can definitely afford a higher monthly payment on a bigger house but with the current market I'm not sure a few extra hundred per month is going to get us a bigger house.rnrnI am considering a HELOC because we have a basement that would add so much room if able to finish it. The basement would need a ton of work. Probably 15k in sump and waterproofing before we could even put up walls, electricity, etc. I have some savings but I'd like to keep it for emergencies. Opinions?
Asked by Aaron G | Irwin, PA| 03-13-2026| 101 views|Affordable Housing|Updated 1 month ago
Taking the HELOC to finish the basement is almost certainly your best move to avoid becoming "house poor" in 2026. Because you bought in 2019, you’re sitting on a "unicorn" mortgage—a 4% interest rate and a very low $800 payment—that is virtually impossible to replicate in today’s market, where rates are hovering around 6.5%. If you sold and moved, that "few extra hundred" a month would likely be swallowed up just by the higher interest rate and increased home prices, leaving you with a similar-sized house but a much tighter budget. By using a HELOC, you can keep your rock-bottom primary mortgage intact while tapping into your equity to create the extra square footage your family needs. Since a HELOC works like a credit card, you can draw the $15k for waterproofing first to stabilize the foundation without committing to the full renovation cost all at once. This allows you to preserve your emergency savings, phase the construction as you can afford it, and ultimately increase your home’s resale value by 55% to 70% of what you spend.
Suggested Next Step
Would you like a breakdown of the estimated monthly interest-only payment for a $15,000 draw versus a full $40,000 renovation at current 2026 HELOC rates?
Before moving forward here are somethings to think about:
How long will we stay if we renovate? (If less than 3–5 years, renovations may not be worth it.)
Will a finished basement truly solve the space issue?
How much equity do we actually have?
What would our payment really be if we moved?
Many people assume it will be “a few hundred more”, but often it ends up being $800–$1,200 more per month.
You could always rent out your current home and increase the rent to help offset the cost of your new home. But speak to an expert in your area to see how much rent you could collect a month.
That’s a really understandable concern, and honestly you’re asking all the right questions. Having a $800 mortgage at 4% is a great position to be in, so it makes sense that you’d want to be careful about giving that up and stretching your budget too far.
Finishing the basement could be a really practical way to create more space without taking on a much larger monthly payment. A lot of homeowners look at that option when they like their location and their current mortgage but simply need more room. Of course, with something like waterproofing and sump work, it’s smart to address those issues first before investing in finishing the space.
A HELOC is one option people use for projects like that since it lets you access some of the equity in your home while keeping your existing mortgage in place. That said, it’s always a good idea to talk through the numbers carefully with a lender so you understand what the payment might look like and how it fits comfortably within your budget.
Another thing that can be helpful is comparing the two paths side by side—what it might cost to finish the basement versus what your monthly payment might look like if you sold and moved into a larger home in today’s market. Sometimes seeing the numbers next to each other makes the decision a lot clearer.
There isn’t a one-size-fits-all answer here. For some families, staying and improving the home they already have makes the most sense. For others, moving ends up being the better long-term fit. I recommend connecting with a highly recommended, top-producing local realtor in your area who can help you review what homes are actually selling for right now. It can also be helpful to speak with a trusted mortgage lender to run some numbers. Together, that information will give you a clearer picture of what a move might realistically look like before you make any decisions.
This is a common question among Florida buyers and sellers, and the answer depends on your specific situation and local market conditions. Understanding the fundamentals before making any decisions protects your investment and your timeline.
In Lecanto, Citrus County, Florida, the real estate landscape has its own characteristics that affect how this plays out in practice. The Nature Coast market attracts a diverse buyer pool including relocators from higher-cost states, retirees, and local move-up buyers, which creates consistent demand across most price points and property types.
The strategic approach is to work with a local agent who can pull current comparable sales data and walk you through the specific factors that apply to your situation in Florida. Every market is different at the neighborhood level, and decisions based on general advice or national headlines often miss the local nuances that matter most to your outcome.
Making informed decisions based on local data is always the strongest position.
Kevin Neely & Kaitlynd Robbins | K2 Sells
You’re in a great spot with that payment. That’s the part you don’t want to give up lightly.
At $800/month and ~4%, you’re way below what today’s payments look like. If you sell, you’re not just buying more space, you’re resetting your entire cost of living.
So this really comes down to: can you solve the space problem without blowing up your payment?
Finishing the basement is the cleaner path if it works. Even if you spend $20K–$40K all in, you’re still likely far below what a move would cost you monthly.
A HELOC can make sense, just be careful. It’s variable, so the payment can change. Make sure the total payment (mortgage + HELOC) still feels comfortable.
The bigger risk with the basement isn’t the loan, it’s the unknowns. Water issues can get expensive fast. Get a real quote before you commit.
Simple way to think about it.
If the basement can give you the space you need, keep the low payment and improve what you have.
If it won’t truly solve the problem, then moving starts to make more sense.
Most people in your position try to make the current house work first because that 4% loan is hard to replace.
The HELOC route makes a lot of sense in your situation, and here's why.
You bought at $110K with about $35K in equity and an $800 a month payment at 4 percent. That's a fantastic position to be in right now. If you sell and buy something bigger, you're giving up that 4 percent rate for something in the mid-6 to 7 percent range. On a $250K house with your equity rolled in, you're looking at roughly $1,400 to $1,600 a month before taxes and insurance. That's double what you're paying now. Your fear of being house poor is completely valid because that jump is real.
A HELOC lets you tap your equity without touching your first mortgage. Your rate and payment stay exactly where they are. HELOC rates are variable and higher than your mortgage rate, currently in the 8 to 9 percent range in most cases, but you're only borrowing what you need and you can pay it down aggressively. On a $40K to $50K HELOC draw for the basement project, your combined monthly payment would still likely be well under what a new mortgage on a bigger house would cost.
On the basement itself, your instinct to start with waterproofing and sump work is correct. That's the unsexy but essential first step. Do not put up walls, flooring, or electrical until the moisture issue is fully resolved or you'll be ripping it all out in a few years. Get two or three quotes on the waterproofing and sump system so you know exactly what that number is before you commit.
Once the basement is dry, finishing it out with framing, drywall, electrical, flooring, and a bathroom if plumbing allows could run another $20K to $40K depending on the size and finishes. A finished basement can add significant usable square footage to your home and meaningfully increase its value. It won't return dollar for dollar at resale, but it gives your family the space you need right now without blowing up your monthly budget.
Keep your emergency savings intact. That's what the HELOC is for. Borrow against the equity, keep your cash reserve, finish the basement in phases if you need to, and stay in a house with an $800 a month mortgage while everyone else is out there fighting over $2,000 payments.
The one scenario where selling makes more sense is if the house has other problems beyond size, like a bad location, bad schools, or structural issues that make the basement project impractical. If it's purely a space issue and the basement solves it, stay put and build out what you have.
Barrett Henry
Broker Associate | REALTOR®
RE/MAX Collective · The NOW Team
Tampa Bay, Florida
nowtb.com
Keeping that 4% mortgage and using a HELOC to add usable space is a genuinely smart move in this rate environment, as long as the basement project makes financial sense. The issue is the $15,000 in waterproofing and sump work before you can even start finishing it. That is a significant spend on infrastructure you will never see, and basement finishing costs on top of that can easily push the total to $40,000 or more depending on scope.
The question to ask yourself is whether a finished basement actually solves the problem long term or just buys you a few more years. If your family truly needs more bedrooms and the basement cannot deliver that, you may end up spending the money and still needing to move in three years anyway.
HELOC rates are variable and currently sitting in the 8 to 9 percent range for most borrowers, so the cost of borrowing is real. Run the numbers on what the monthly payment looks like on a $40,000 to $50,000 draw and make sure that added to your current mortgage still feels comfortable before you commit.
You’re right to be cautious; with a 4% rate and an $800 payment, you have a great mortgage that’s very hard to replace in today’s market.
Finishing a basement is often cheaper than moving to a bigger house, and a well‑done basement can return about 60–75% of what you spend at resale while adding the space your family needs now.
Using a HELOC can make sense if you tightly control the budget, are okay with a variable rate and the higher payment, and keep a real emergency fund since the HELOC is secured by your home.
I hear your concern loud and clear. Being "house poor" is a real stressor, especially when you're currently enjoying a comfortable $800/month payment. You are in a great position with that 4% rate, which is why the "remodel vs. move" debate is so important for you right now.
Here is how I would weigh these two paths:
Option 1: The HELOC & Basement Remodel
The Pros: You keep your 4% mortgage. A HELOC allows you to borrow only what you need, and in 2026, interest on these funds is often tax-deductible if used for "substantial improvements." Finishing a basement can add significant square footage and typically recoups about 70% of its cost in home value.
The Cons: You mentioned $15k just for waterproofing—that’s a "hidden cost" that doesn't add visual beauty but is 100% necessary. Basement projects can easily balloon from $20k to $50k once you add finishes. Also, HELOC rates are variable, so you’ll want to budget for potential payment shifts.
Option 2: Selling and Moving
The Pros: You get a house that was designed to be bigger, rather than trying to fit a family into a finished basement. Pennsylvania's market in 2026 has become much more balanced, meaning you might have more room to negotiate than you did a few years ago.
The Cons: You will be trading that 4% rate for a 2026 market rate (likely in the 6% range). Even with your equity, your monthly payment will definitely jump significantly.
My Advice for Your Next Steps:
Get a "Real" Quote: Don't guess on the basement. Get three detailed quotes from local contractors. If the "waterproofing + finishing" cost is $60k, compare that monthly HELOC payment to what a new mortgage would look like.
Run a "Net Sheet": Connect with a local real estate professional in your part of PA. Ask them for a "Seller’s Net Sheet" to see exactly how much cash you’d walk away with after selling. Then, have them run the numbers on a larger home in your area.
If you need a hand finding a top-tier agent in your part of Pennsylvania to help run these numbers, I’d be happy to send over some recommendations from my network. You deserve to make this choice based on hard data, not just "gut feelings!"
Tricia Jacobs
Managing Broker/REALTOR®
You are in a great position with that 4% rate, which is why this decision is so important. Giving up a comfortable $800 mortgage is a big move, so you need to compare the "real" costs of both paths before you decide.
1. Audit the Basement Project
Don't guess on the costs. Get three detailed quotes from local contractors for the waterproofing and the finish work. If the total is $50k+, calculate that monthly HELOC payment and add it to your current $800. Is that total lower than a new mortgage for a bigger house? That is your "break-even" point.
2. Get a "Seller’s Net Sheet"
Connect with a full-time, local real estate professional in your part of Pennsylvania. Ask them for a Net Sheet to see exactly how much cash you would walk away with if you sold today. Knowing your "buying power" is the only way to see if a bigger house is actually within reach.
3. Interview for Strategy
I highly recommend interviewing 2–3 local agents. Ask them: "In our specific neighborhood, how much value does a finished basement actually add compared to a house with more square footage above ground?" You want to make sure you aren't over-improving a home for the area.
The Bottom Line:
Treat this as a math problem. Once you have the renovation quotes and the local market data, the right choice for your family will be obvious. I have some great professional connections in PA and would be happy to send over a few top-tier agents for you to interview. They can help you run these numbers with no obligation.
Feel free to reach out if you’d like those recommendations!
Tricia Jacobs
Managing Broker/REALTOR®
A classic question of "Love it or List It?". Can you upgrade your home without overimproving it for the neighborhood comps? I suggest interviewing several real estate agents who can pull factual data from nearby sales. Not getting a zestimate or redfin guess of value. Then compare what homes are for sale out there and if you can get what you'd want and for what price. There are some mortgages that can be assumed and maybe you can find a new place, with a low rate by assuming that Seller's current terms. It does require some money down to fill the gap from their mortgage balance to their listing price. Sometimes the number makes sense to assum a loan. Other times, the gap is too wide and getting a second mortgage to bridge the difference causes the combined monthly payment to be higher than getting one new loan at today's rate. You can then make an informed decison after getting several experienced, award-winning local REALTORS to assess your home, and by checking what homes are listed for sale. Then make your decision to Love it or LIST it.
This is a really common crossroads, and the good news is you're asking the right questions before making a move — that already puts you ahead.
Before anything else, let's reframe this: you're not just deciding whether to renovate or move. You're deciding what you want real estate to do for your future. That answer shapes everything else.
The HELOC/basement question: The $15k for waterproofing before you can even start finishing is a real consideration. Before committing to that spend, have your agent pull rental comps for your area — both for your home as-is and for comparable finished-basement properties.
The core question is simple: does finishing the basement increase your potential rent enough to justify the cost? If you can get strong rent without the renovation, don't spend the money. If the premium is significant, maybe you do. The numbers will tell you.
The bigger opportunity you might be sitting on: Here's what a lot of people in your position don't realize — that $800/month mortgage at 4% is an asset, not just a bill. If your home can rent for meaningfully more than your mortgage, keeping it as a rental while you move up could be one of the best financial moves you make.
My partner and I did exactly this. Our mortgage was $1,000/month, and we realized we could rent the home for $2,000. We refinanced, pulled out $75k in equity, kept our mortgage payment virtually the same (due to a lower interest rate when refinancing) — and used that equity as the down payment on our next home. The old house cash-flows, the new house fits our life, and the "cost" of the down payment was essentially zero.
That's the scenario worth modeling. A general benchmark: if you can clear at least $400/month above your mortgage in rent, the math usually makes a strong case for keeping the property.
The bottom line: Don't make this decision on instinct alone. Have your agent run the actual numbers — rental comps, equity position, what a realistic purchase looks like in today's market with that equity deployed as a down payment. You may find you're in a much stronger position than you think.
P.S. this is exactly why buying a home with "Higher rates" is the BEST WAY TO COME OUT AHEAD IN THE LONG RUN. When you buy a home you can afford at "reasonably high rates" (5,6,7%) then there is a REAL chance that later down the road rates will be LOWER - meaning you paid Less for the home to start (Prices are lower when rates are higher) and now you can refinance - essentially coming out twice ahead......... you can never change the price you pay for a home, but you can always re-finance)
You’re actually in a very strong position. A $800 mortgage at 4% is amazing in today’s market, so I completely understand not wanting to give that up. If moving won’t significantly improve your space without a big jump in payment, finishing the basement could be a smart option. A HELOC can work well for projects like that, especially if it adds usable living space and value to your home. I’d just make sure the waterproofing and structural work are done right first, then build the space over time so you’re not stretching your budget.