A home improvement loan is taken to refurnish, remodel, repair, or renovate a house. One can use home improvement loans for external repairs, tiling and flooring, internal and external painting, etc. In the concept of loan, the borrower initially receives an amount of money from the lender, which the borrower pays back, usually but not always in regular installments to the lender with interest on the debt. When the rates are lower, obviously the borrower has lower monthly repayments.
For smaller projects, like the remodeling of a kitchen, paying from savings is the cheapest option. A personal loan can be one more option. While these options can be used for smaller projects, the larger projects--like the creation of a swimming pool or the complete remodeling of the house--obviously require more money, which may not easily be met from either savings or credit cards. Hence, one must try other options for raising cash to improve a home, including further advance on a mortgage, an unsecured loan with flat rate or an unsecured loan with variable rate, or a secured loan. Many major home improvements are funded in this manner.
A secured loan means that a borrower uses his home or some of his property or assets as a guarantee to the lending company. If the borrower fails to repay, the lender can claim the secured property. Because the lender has kept the property or assets for the guarantee of the repayment, the rates of interest on loans of this kind are generally lower than with unsecured loans. Government home improvement loans also offer lower interest rates.