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Reverse Mortgages: Pros, Cons, and Who They Actually Help

Home & Mortgage 10 min read · All Articles
Updated May 15, 2026·10 min read·All Articles

Reverse mortgages are among the most misunderstood financial products in America. For some retirees, they are a lifeline that enables aging in place. For others, they are an expensive last resort that erodes family wealth. The truth depends entirely on your specific situation.

How Reverse Mortgages Actually Work

A reverse mortgage is a loan for homeowners 62+ that converts home equity into cash without monthly repayments, repaid when the borrower sells, moves, or dies.

A Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) allows homeowners aged 62 and older to borrow against their home equity without making monthly mortgage payments. Instead of you paying the lender, the lender pays you through one of four methods: a lump sum, monthly tenure payments for as long as you live in the home, a line of credit that grows over time, or a combination of these options.

The loan balance grows over time as interest accrues on the amount borrowed. You retain full ownership of the home and can live in it indefinitely as long as you pay property taxes, homeowner insurance, and maintain the property. The loan becomes due when you sell the home, move out permanently, or pass away. At that point, you or your heirs repay the loan balance. If the home value exceeds the balance, heirs keep the difference. If the balance exceeds the home value, FHA insurance covers the gap because reverse mortgages are non-recourse, meaning the lender can never collect more than the home is worth.

The amount available depends on your age, home value, and current interest rates. A 70-year-old with a $450,000 home might access $180,000 to $225,000. Estimate your numbers with our Reverse Mortgage Calculator.

When a Reverse Mortgage Makes Sense

The ideal reverse mortgage candidate meets several criteria. You plan to stay in the home long-term: the upfront costs of a reverse mortgage ($15,000 to $25,000 in origination fees, MIP, and closing costs) make it expensive if you move within a few years. You are house-rich but cash-poor: if most of your wealth is in home equity and you need income supplementation, a reverse mortgage unlocks that equity without selling. You have no desire to leave the home to heirs or your heirs understand and accept the arrangement.

Specific use cases where reverse mortgages shine include: eliminating an existing mortgage payment to free up cash flow in retirement, funding long-term care to avoid nursing home placement, delaying Social Security to age 70 for higher monthly benefits (using reverse mortgage income to bridge the gap), and establishing a growing line of credit as a retirement safety net that increases in value regardless of home price changes.

When to Avoid a Reverse Mortgage

Reverse mortgages are generally a poor choice if you plan to move within 5 years (closing costs erode the benefit), if you want to leave a debt-free home to heirs, if you have a spouse under 62 who is not on the loan (they could lose the home if you pass away or move to a care facility, though recent rule changes offer some protections), or if you cannot afford ongoing property taxes and insurance (failure to pay these can trigger foreclosure even with a reverse mortgage).

The biggest risk: outliving the proceeds. If you take a lump sum and spend it, you may be left with no equity and no income source. The line of credit option mitigates this risk by providing ongoing access to funds that grow over time. Financial planners generally recommend the line of credit over the lump sum for this reason.

The True Cost of a Reverse Mortgage

Upfront costs include an origination fee of up to $6,000, an upfront mortgage insurance premium of 2% of the home value ($9,000 on a $450,000 home), and standard closing costs of $3,000 to $5,000. Total upfront: $15,000 to $25,000, typically financed into the loan. Ongoing costs include 0.5% annual MIP and interest on the loan balance at current rates around 6-7%.

The compounding effect is significant: on a $200,000 reverse mortgage balance at 6.5% interest plus 0.5% MIP, the balance grows to approximately $295,000 after 5 years and $435,000 after 10 years. This is why the line of credit option, where you only borrow what you need when you need it, is usually more cost-effective than taking a large lump sum. Plan your retirement income strategy with our Retirement Drawdown Calculator.

Alternatives to Reverse Mortgages

Before committing to a reverse mortgage, explore these alternatives that may achieve similar goals with fewer costs. A home equity line of credit (HELOC) provides access to home equity with lower upfront costs and the flexibility to draw only what you need. Current HELOC rates run 7-9%, and unlike a reverse mortgage, you make monthly interest-only payments. The downside: you must qualify based on income and credit, which can be challenging for retirees with limited fixed income.

Downsizing converts home equity to cash while potentially reducing living expenses. Selling a $450,000 home and purchasing a $250,000 condo frees up $200,000 in equity minus transaction costs (roughly $170,000 net), plus ongoing savings on property taxes, maintenance, and utilities. This approach preserves the full home value for heirs while providing substantial liquid assets.

A sale-leaseback arrangement involves selling your home to an investor and renting it back. This provides the full equity value immediately while letting you stay in the home. The drawback is losing ownership and facing potential rent increases. Some nonprofit organizations and family members offer this arrangement on favorable terms. For retirees focused on income generation, our Retirement Income Calculator can help determine how much monthly income your equity could generate if invested in an income-producing portfolio instead.

The Growing Line of Credit Strategy

Perhaps the most powerful and least understood feature of reverse mortgages is the line of credit growth rate. When you choose the line of credit option, the available balance grows over time at the same rate as the loan interest rate plus the MIP rate, regardless of what happens to your home value. At a combined rate of 7 percent, a $200,000 line of credit grows to approximately $394,000 after 10 years even if you never draw a penny. This creates a guaranteed, growing financial reserve that increases in value faster than most conservative investments. Financial planners increasingly recommend establishing a reverse mortgage line of credit in your early to mid sixties as a retirement safety net, drawing on it only if needed during market downturns to avoid selling investments at a loss.

AgeApprox. % of Home Value AvailableOn $400K HomeOn $600K Home
6238-42%$152,000-$168,000$228,000-$252,000
6742-48%$168,000-$192,000$252,000-$288,000
7248-54%$192,000-$216,000$288,000-$324,000
7754-60%$216,000-$240,000$324,000-$360,000
82+60-68%$240,000-$272,000$360,000-$408,000

How the Loan Balance Grows: The Math Nobody Explains

A reverse mortgage is fundamentally a negative amortization loan — instead of your balance shrinking each month (like a traditional mortgage), it grows. You borrow against your home equity, and the unpaid interest compounds on top of the principal, increasing the total amount owed over time. Understanding this growth rate is critical before signing.

Example: a 70-year-old with a $400,000 home (no existing mortgage) takes a reverse mortgage. The lender provides access to approximately $200,000-240,000 (50-60% of home value). If the homeowner takes $100,000 as a lump sum at a 6.5% interest rate and makes no payments, the balance grows to approximately $134,000 in 5 years, $181,000 in 10 years, and $244,000 in 15 years. Add origination fees ($6,000-12,000) and mortgage insurance premiums (0.5% of home value annually), and the total amount owed can approach or exceed the home's value within 15-20 years, especially if home appreciation is slower than interest accumulation.

The non-recourse protection is the critical safety net: you (or your heirs) can never owe more than the home's value at the time of sale. If the loan balance reaches $350,000 but the home is only worth $320,000, the FHA mortgage insurance covers the $30,000 shortfall. Your heirs are not responsible for the difference. However, this means the home equity that would have been their inheritance has been consumed — a consequence that should be discussed openly with family before proceeding.

Who Actually Benefits from a Reverse Mortgage

Reverse mortgages are a legitimate financial tool in specific circumstances — but they are aggressively marketed to seniors for whom they are inappropriate. The ideal candidate meets ALL of these criteria:

Age 62+ with significant home equity (at least 50% equity, ideally no existing mortgage). Plans to stay in the home for 10+ years — moving within 5 years makes the upfront costs (origination fees of $6,000-12,000 plus closing costs of $3,000-8,000) disproportionately expensive relative to the benefit. Has no heirs who need the home or its equity, or has discussed the implications with heirs and everyone agrees. Has exhausted other options — downsizing, home equity line of credit, tapping retirement accounts, or reducing expenses would not meet the need. Needs supplemental income rather than a lump sum — the line-of-credit option provides the most flexibility and lowest long-term cost.

The growing line of credit feature is the most financially sophisticated use of a reverse mortgage. An unused credit line grows at the same rate as the loan balance (the interest rate plus 0.5% MIP). A $100,000 credit line at 6.5% grows to approximately $134,000 in 5 years and $181,000 in 10 years — without you borrowing a dollar. This creates a growing reserve fund that can serve as a last-resort emergency fund, a hedge against long-term care costs, or a strategic tool for managing sequence-of-returns risk in a retirement portfolio. Financial planners who specialize in retirement income are increasingly recommending this approach for select clients.

Alternatives That Preserve Your Home Equity

Before committing to a reverse mortgage, evaluate these alternatives that achieve similar goals — supplemental retirement income or access to home equity — without the costs and complexity:

Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC): borrow against your equity at variable rates (currently 8-10%) with interest-only payments during the draw period. Unlike a reverse mortgage, you make monthly payments — but you retain full ownership and equity growth. A $100,000 HELOC with interest-only payments costs approximately $700-830/month. Best for homeowners who need periodic access to funds rather than ongoing monthly income and who can manage the monthly payments.

Downsizing: selling your $400,000 home and purchasing a $250,000 condo or smaller home frees up $120,000-140,000 in cash (after transaction costs) while reducing property taxes, insurance, maintenance, and utilities by $400-800/month. The combination of cash proceeds plus reduced expenses often provides more financial relief than a reverse mortgage, without the accumulating loan balance. This option works best for homeowners whose current home exceeds their needs — empty nesters in 4-bedroom homes, for example.

Renting out a room: a spare bedroom rented at $600-1,000/month generates $7,200-12,000/year in income — comparable to reverse mortgage monthly payments without any reduction in home equity. Platforms like Silvernest match older homeowners with compatible renters. The income is taxable, but home-sharing expenses (proportional utilities, cleaning, furnishings) are deductible, reducing the effective tax burden. This option provides companionship as well as income — a benefit that financial analysis alone does not capture but that many retirees value highly.

What Your Result Means

Available amount covers your needs for 5-10+ years: A reverse mortgage may be a viable tool for supplementing retirement income. Proceed with HUD-approved counseling (required by law) and compare the costs to alternatives (HELOC, downsizing, selling).

Amount is insufficient or costs are high relative to benefit: Downsizing (selling and purchasing smaller) often provides more net cash with lower ongoing costs. A reverse mortgage on a $250,000 home may not provide enough to justify the fees ($10,000-$20,000 upfront).

Next Steps

Complete HUD-required counseling (free or low-cost, find at hud.gov). Compare a reverse mortgage to: selling and downsizing, a HELOC, or renting out a room. Use our Reverse Mortgage Calculator and Home Equity Calculator.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does a reverse mortgage work?
You receive payments from the lender (lump sum, monthly, or credit line) based on your home equity, age, and interest rate. No monthly payments are required — the loan balance grows over time and is repaid when you sell, move out, or pass away. You retain ownership and can live in the home indefinitely. The home is sold to repay the loan, with remaining equity going to your heirs.
What are the downsides of a reverse mortgage?
High upfront costs ($10,000-$20,000 in origination, insurance, and closing). Growing loan balance (interest accrues on the outstanding balance — your equity decreases over time). Reduced inheritance for heirs (the home may have little equity remaining). You must maintain the home, pay property taxes, and keep homeowner's insurance — failure to do so can trigger foreclosure.
Can I lose my home with a reverse mortgage?
Only if you fail to meet the obligations: pay property taxes, maintain homeowner's insurance, keep the home in reasonable repair, and live in it as your primary residence. Moving to a nursing home for 12+ consecutive months can also trigger repayment. As long as you meet these conditions: you can live in the home for life regardless of the loan balance.
Who should consider a reverse mortgage?
Homeowners 62+ who: are house-rich but cash-poor (significant equity, limited income), plan to stay in the home long-term (10+ years), have no plans to leave the home as inheritance, and have exhausted other income sources. It is a tool of last resort for most — explore alternatives (downsizing, part-time work, spending adjustments) first.
What happens to a reverse mortgage when I die?
Heirs inherit the home with the reverse mortgage balance due. Options: (1) Sell the home and keep equity above the loan balance. (2) Refinance into a traditional mortgage to keep the home. (3) Surrender the home to the lender. If the loan balance exceeds the home value: heirs owe nothing beyond the home — reverse mortgages are non-recourse (FHA HECM). The lender absorbs the loss through FHA insurance.
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Abiot Y. Derbie, PhD

Postdoctoral Research Fellow. Reviewed by Dr. Eskezeia Y. Dessie and Armin Allahverdy, PhD. Content verified against IRS, Federal Reserve, BLS, and Census Bureau sources. Learn more about our methodology.

This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Information is based on publicly available data from government sources including the IRS, Federal Reserve, and Bureau of Labor Statistics. Consult a qualified professional for advice tailored to your situation. Full Disclaimer