Finance of America has introduced a new second-lien reverse mortgage product designed to help older homeowners access home equity without refinancing their existing low-rate mortgages, extending a broader push by the company to meet rising demand from equity-rich, rate-locked borrowers.
The product, HomeSafe Second Line of Credit, allows eligible homeowners to tap equity while keeping their first mortgage in place and without making monthly mortgage payments. The launch builds on the company’s recent expansion of its HomeSafe Second offering into additional states, bringing the product to 16 markets as demand accelerates among borrowers age 55 and older.
The move comes as many homeowners remain locked into sub-4% mortgage rates secured during the pandemic and are unwilling to refinance in today’s higher-rate environment. At the same time, home price appreciation has left borrowers with significant untapped equity, creating demand for second-lien solutions that preserve the first mortgage while unlocking liquidity.
Finance of America’s latest rollout reflects that shift. Originally introduced in 2023, HomeSafe Second is positioned as an alternative to traditional home equity products, allowing borrowers to access a lump sum or line of credit without taking on new monthly principal and interest payments, provided they meet property-related obligations.
Unlike a HELOC, which typically requires monthly payments and standard income and credit underwriting, the second-lien reverse structure defers repayment until a maturity event such as the sale of the home or the borrower leaving the property.
The expansion and new product variation also underscore a growing opportunity for mortgage professionals. Older homeowners now control a significant share of U.S. housing wealth, with Americans age 70 and older holding roughly a quarter of the nation’s real estate value.
As a result, housing wealth is increasingly being used as a financial tool rather than a last-resort option. Borrowers are tapping equity to manage rising healthcare and living costs, consolidate debt, or preserve investment portfolios during periods of market volatility.
For originators, the shift highlights a growing need to move beyond traditional refinance strategies. With rate-and-term activity still constrained, second-lien and reverse mortgage products are emerging as a viable way to serve clients who are equity-rich but payment-sensitive.
As lenders continue to build products around that constraint, second-lien reverse mortgages are becoming a more prominent part of the home equity toolkit, and a potential new advisory channel for loan originators working with aging-in-place borrowers.
