Helocator
Vermont · typical home $394,227

HELOC calculator — Vermont

The typical Vermont home is worth $394,227 (7% above the U.S. average). The calculator below starts from that value — edit it to match your home.

Conservative · 70%Aggressive · 95%

You may be able to borrow up to

$114,093

with a HELOC or home equity loan, at a 85% combined loan-to-value limit.

How your $394,227 home value breaks down

Already owed · $221,000 Available · $114,093 Above 85% cap · $59,134
Your equity
$173,227
Max total loans (85%)
$335,093
Already owed
$221,000
Compare HELOC & home equity rates

Lenders set final limits based on credit, income and a home appraisal.

How much can you borrow in Vermont?

Vermont’s typical home value of $394,227 ranks #22 of 51 (50 states plus D.C.). At an 85% combined loan-to-value cap, total borrowing against such a home is capped near $335,093. A homeowner who still owes about $221,000 could tap roughly $114,093with a HELOC or home equity loan — though your own equity, credit and a lender’s appraisal decide the real figure.

The formula is the same in every state:

available HELOC = (home value × max CLTV%) − mortgage balance

New to home equity lines? See how a HELOC works and what CLTV means.

Compare HELOC rates in Vermont

Rates and limits vary by lender. Comparing multiple offers is the single biggest factor in what you’ll actually pay.

Lender comparison coming soon.

Frequently asked questions

How much HELOC can I get in Vermont?+

It depends on your home's value and what you still owe. With Vermont's typical home value of $394,227 and an 85% combined loan-to-value (CLTV) cap, total borrowing is capped near $335,093. A homeowner who still owes about $221,000 could access roughly $114,093 as a HELOC. Enter your own numbers above for an exact estimate.

What is the typical home value in Vermont?+

The typical home in Vermont is worth about $394,227 (Zillow Home Value Index, April 2026), which is 7% above the U.S. typical of $368,198.

Are HELOC rules different in Vermont?+

The math for borrowing power is the same nationwide — lenders cap combined loan-to-value, usually at 80–90%. What differs by state is home values (which set your equity) and the specific lenders available. Always confirm terms with a licensed Vermont lender.

Other states

Home value: Zillow Home Value Index, April 2026. Last reviewed June 2026.