Don’t finance your car with your home equity loan

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[Consumerist crosspost]

Maryland consumer attorney Sonya Smith-Valentine warns not to use a home equity loan to purchase a car. Her reasoning makes sense. When you use a home equity loan, you pay for the for many years longer than you would with a regular car loan, multiplying the interest you end up paying.

The same is true for rolling a new car into your refinance. If you refinance your house and take out enough money to purchase a car, for example, you pay for it over the life of the home loan, which is probably 30 years. Even though your home loan interest rate is lower than a car loan interest rate, you will pay more for the car by rolling it into your home loan.

Get a car loan instead. Or, if you have already done this, Pay more than the minimum monthly payments so that your principal is restored more quickly.

Brad Perri, bankruptcy attorney at Weikel Law Firm, LLC

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