Velocity banking is a mortgage acceleration strategy that uses a Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) to redirect your cash flow toward paying down your mortgage faster than traditional monthly payments alone. The core concept is simple: instead of depositing your paycheck into a regular checking account and paying bills from there, you deposit all your income directly onto your mortgage as extra principal payments. Then you draw from your HELOC to cover your monthly living expenses.
The result is that your entire monthly income hits your mortgage principal at once, rather than trickling in. This creates a "velocity effect" — your mortgage balance drops more aggressively each month, which means less interest accrues over the life of the loan. Over time, this can shave years off your mortgage and save tens of thousands of dollars in interest.
💡 Key insight: The math works because your mortgage balance drops faster than it would with regular payments alone. Even though you're paying interest on the HELOC, the reduced mortgage interest often more than makes up for it.
Our calculator compares two scenarios side by side so you can see the real numbers for your situation:
You make your regular monthly P&I payment. Interest accrues based on the remaining balance. Over 25-30 years, you could pay 2-3x your original loan amount in total.
Every dollar of income hits your mortgage principal. Your HELOC covers expenses. The trade-off is that you now have HELOC interest to factor in — but if your HELOC rate is competitive and your income is substantial, the math can work in your favor.
⚠️ Important: Velocity banking is NOT a get-rich-quick scheme. It requires discipline, a solid income, and careful management. If your HELOC rate exceeds your mortgage rate, or your expenses exceed your income, the strategy may not work in your favor.
Our free calculator does the complex math for you. Here's what to enter:
Click CALCULATE and the tool generates a side-by-side comparison showing years saved, total interest paid, cash flow impact, and an amortization chart.
Velocity banking works best when:
Velocity banking may NOT work well when:
A HELOC (Home Equity Line of Credit) is a revolving line of credit secured by your home's equity. Unlike a traditional loan, you can draw against it as needed and only pay interest on what you use. HELOCs typically have variable rates tied to the prime rate.
Velocity banking can work mathematically — depositing all income onto your mortgage does accelerate payoff. However, the actual benefit depends on your specific numbers. The HELOC interest you pay may offset some or all of the mortgage interest savings. Use our calculator to see your real numbers before deciding.
If your HELOC rate increases, the strategy becomes less effective and potentially counterproductive. Always plan with a conservative (higher) HELOC rate estimate. Consider what happens if rates go up 2-3% from today's rate.
There's a "simplified" version where you make extra mortgage payments from surplus income without a HELOC — essentially aggressive bi-weekly or extra monthly payments. The HELOC version is more aggressive but also more complex and carries more risk.
As a starting point, your HELOC should cover at least 2-3 months of living expenses plus a buffer. Many velocity banking practitioners recommend a HELOC equal to 10-33% of your home's equity. Our calculator will show you whether your HELOC limit is sufficient.
No. This calculator is an educational tool for exploring the math behind velocity banking. It does not constitute financial advice. Always consult a licensed financial advisor before making major financial decisions.
Unlike many velocity banking calculators that oversimplify or assume unrealistic scenarios, this tool models the full two-phase process: (1) active mortgage payoff with HELOC cycling, and (2) post-mortgage HELOC cleanup. It shows you the complete picture including peak HELOC balance, total interest costs, and the time to full debt freedom.