Refinancing Home to Pay off Debt Florida — What It Costs, Which Loan Fits, and Whether It’s Worth It
Short answer first: yes, refinancing your home to pay off debt in Florida almost always works through a cash-out refinance, and most of our eight loan programs allow it. Conventional and FHA cash-out refinances typically max out at 80% loan-to-value, VA cash-out can go as high as 90–100% for eligible veterans, Jumbo and Non-QM usually cap around 70–75%, and USDA does not permit cash-out at all. If your current mortgage rate is well under today’s rates, ask us about a HELOC instead — a full refinance isn’t always the cheaper move. The right answer depends on your loan type, your credit, and how much equity sits in your Florida home right now.
Typical Max LTV on
Conventional/FHA Cash-Out
Can Refinance a
Florida Home
Typical Florida
Closing Timeline
Tax Returns Needed
on Non-QM & DSCR
Your Answer Right Here
Refinancing Home to Pay off Debt Florida, By Program
If you’re weighing refinancing your home to pay off debt in Florida, here’s the comparison you actually need, before anything else. A cash-out refinance replaces your current mortgage with a bigger one and hands you the difference in cash at closing, which you then use to wipe out credit cards, a car loan, medical bills, or a personal loan — folding several high-rate balances into one mortgage payment, usually at a lower rate than any of them carried on their own.
| Loan Program | Cash-Out for Debt Payoff? | Typical Max LTV |
|---|---|---|
| Conventional | Yes | 80% |
| FHA | Yes | 80% |
| VA | Yes — veterans/service members | 90%–100% |
| USDA | No — rate-and-term only | N/A |
| Jumbo | Yes | 70%–75% |
| Non-QM | Yes — bank statement/P&L | 75%–80% |
| DSCR | Yes — investment property | 70%–75% |
| No Income Verification (Primary) | Yes — $100k minimum loan | 70%–75% |
*Illustrative ranges as of July 2026, not a quote or commitment to lend. Your actual loan-to-value, rate, and cash available at closing depend on credit score, county, property type, and the lender’s guidelines that day. Call 888.958.5382 or apply online for your real numbers.
I’m Chris Luis, Broker/Owner of Mortgage-World.com (NMLS #1630225), licensed in Florida under MLB 1987, and debt-consolidation refinances are one of the most common calls my sister Julia and I take from Florida homeowners. The one thing every caller wants to know is simple: does folding this debt into my mortgage actually save me money, and can I even qualify. USDA is the one program off the table entirely for cash-out, since the USDA rules only permit a rate-and-term refinance. Every other program on our list can put cash in your hand at closing — the differences are how much equity you need to leave in the home and how your file gets documented.
Why This Matters
Does Refinancing to Pay off Debt Actually Save Florida Homeowners Money?
Credit card APRs sitting near 24–29% are common right now, and a personal loan or a car note rarely prices much better. A cash-out refinance rolls that balance into a mortgage rate that’s typically a third to a half of what you’re paying on the card, and it stretches repayment over 15 to 30 years instead of a revolving balance that compounds every month it’s unpaid. Run the math on a $20,000 credit card balance at 26% versus that same $20,000 tacked onto a mortgage at today’s rates, and the monthly difference is usually not close.
The Trade-Off You Need to Understand
Stretching a $20,000 debt over a 30-year mortgage instead of a 3-year payoff plan means you can pay more in total interest over time, even at a lower rate, if you never pay the loan down early. The move works best for homeowners who are disciplined about not running the paid-off cards back up, and who plan to stay in the home long enough to benefit. It’s also not the only tool — a home equity line of credit, or HELOC, leaves your existing low first mortgage rate untouched and only borrows against the equity above it, which can beat a full refinance if you locked in a rate below 4% a few years back.
Why Florida Homeowners Are Especially Well Positioned
Home values across much of Florida — Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, Orange, and Hillsborough counties in particular — have climbed enough over the past several years that a lot of homeowners are sitting on far more equity than they realize, even after a hurricane-driven insurance spike or two. That equity is what makes a debt-consolidation refinance possible in the first place; without it, none of the eight programs above can get you to closing.
Which Program Fits Which Florida Homeowner
A W-2 employee with steady pay and 620+ credit usually lands in Conventional or FHA cash-out. A veteran or active-duty service member should almost always run the VA numbers first, since it typically allows the highest loan-to-value of any program on this list. A self-employed Florida homeowner who can’t show enough income on a tax return often qualifies through Non-QM using bank statements or a profit-and-loss statement instead. A landlord pulling cash out of a rental property to pay down personal debt is usually looking at DSCR, which qualifies off the property’s rent roll rather than personal income. And a homeowner who simply doesn’t want to document income at all on their primary residence, but has strong equity and credit, fits our No Income Verification program.
What You’ll Need
Documentation for a Florida Debt Consolidation Refinance
What you’ll need to gather depends on which of the eight programs fits your situation.
- Two years of W-2s or tax returns, recent pay stubs
- Two months of bank statements
- List of debts to be paid off at closing
- VA requires a Certificate of Eligibility
- Standard income and asset documentation
- 620+ credit score for Conventional, 600–660 for Jumbo
- Appraisal confirms your Florida home’s current value
- Jumbo often requires deeper cash reserves
- 12–24 months of bank statements or a P&L in place of tax returns
- No Income Verification (primary) requires a 640 score and $100,000 minimum loan amount
- Manually underwritten — a person reviews the full file
- Qualifies on the rental property’s income, not personal income
- No tax returns or employment verification required
- 600+ credit score, cash-out used to pay off personal or business debt
How To Get Started
Three Steps to Refinancing Your Florida Home to Pay off Debt
Tell us your current mortgage balance, your Florida property, and the debts you want gone, so we can match you to the program with the most cash-out at the best rate.
As a wholesale broker, we shop your file across multiple loan programs instead of quoting you one bank’s single rate sheet.
Once you like your rate, we lock it, your debts get paid directly at the closing table, and you walk away with one payment — typically in 30 to 45 days.
Before you commit, it’s worth checking a couple of free, independent sources. The CFPB’s guidance on managing debt lays out the general trade-offs between consolidating debt into a mortgage versus other payoff strategies. The Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey is a solid free benchmark for where Conventional rates sit nationally. You can verify any broker’s Florida license through the Florida Office of Financial Regulation, and AnnualCreditReport.com is the only site authorized under federal law for a free annual credit report, which is worth pulling before you apply.
Related Resources
Related Mortgage Pages
Consolidating debt with a refinance runs on your equity. These Florida pages cover the options.
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