Secured Home Improvement Loans: Creating A Haven For Yourself!

Posted by admin 18 comments

With the pride of owning the perfect home, comes the hard work of it’s maintenance and furnishing – which is not always a very easy job. Transforming your house into a home or rather – your “haven”, requires not only additional creativity and time, but also an outsized fraction of those saved finances. This may not always be possible with all the regular monthly bills, other debts, household expenses and chores and any additional urgencies that require financial attention. For those of us who feel that home improvements and enhancements are equally important and not just a luxury, but who are at the same time faced with a financial constraint, there is a solution – “Secured Home Improvement Loans.”

Just as the name suggests, Secured Home Improvement Loans are loans or financial solutions taken to assist us in making certain required home improvements. Secured Home Improvement Loans are taken to beautify your home either for your own tastefulness or to add to the current value of your home. Improvement is usually a permanent addition or modification of real property. Home improvements could include house painting, redecoration, repair, refurnishing or renovation. It can also include adding a storey to the house or certain additional home developments to increase the capital value of the house in terms of real estate.

Secured Home Improvement Loans are usually given to home owners. Secured Home Improvement Loans are like regular personal loans where you have to be knowledgeable with regard to interest rates, credit history, collateral, etc. Being secured, this loan entails the presence of collateral. Collateral is some kind of security put up by a borrower that remains in the possession of the loan lender until complete repayment of the loan. Collateral can be in the form of a home, other property in the borrower’s name, a bank account, automobiles, jewellery or any securable asset of the kind. It is important to mention, here, that in case a borrower defaults in his monthly payments or makes incomplete repayments, a lender can pursue the borrower through the legal system, simultaneously seizing the collateral.

Secured Home Improvement Loans are ideally better off than their unsecured counterpart because of the interest rate. As we all know, interest is what makes a loan attractive and feasible. When loans are secured, as in the case of Secured Home Improvement Loans, the interest rate is comparatively lower. This is because the lender can be assured of repayment when collateral of sizable value is placed against it. The interest rate for Home Improvement Loans varies with the amount you wish to borrow, your credit history, the equity in your home and collateral.

With high value collateral, the amount that can be loaned to a borrower is raised, the repayment term is further extended and the repayment options are made more flexible. Good credit history will add impetus to all these benefits while bad credit can do just the opposite.

One of the key factors in availing an inexpensive Secured Home Improvement Loan is the equity of your house or real estate, which refers to a measure of how much of the mortgage on the property, has been paid. Thus, higher the equity better is your chance of locating a cheap Secured Home Improvement Loan and getting a decent amount of loan.

When in the turf to get yourself a good Secured Home Improvement Loan, remember to clarify all details before signing on the dotted line. After all – it’s your money and your home. Comparing interest rates offered on Secured Home Improvement Loans from different lenders gives you a good idea of how competitive they are and familiarizes you with interest rates. Finalize on a Secured Home Improvement Loan only once you are sure that you can meet it’s demands, in terms of interest, monthly payments and collateral necessities. These loans could take a little longer to process because Secured Home Improvement Loan necessitates valuation of collateral. But one thing is for sure, the time it takes is well worth the money saved on interest.

Watch the video related to home improvement

If plunging doesn’t fix a clogged sink, you may have to use a drain snake to clear the clog. Learn how in thisfree online home improvement video, with DIY home repair tips. Expert: Greg Lim Bio: Greg Lim is a professional handyman and residential property manager. In the seven years hes been a contractor, he has fully renovated two houses.

Help answer the question about home improvement

Where should I look for a home improvement loan?
We are looking for a home improvement loan to start a couple of projects on our new home. The loan amount should be something around $15,000 to $20,000 with a low APR. Any suggestions on where to look? We're in Indiana.

18 Comments
Dec 29, 2009
6:20 am
#1 FriendlyHomeServices :

I agree – there is no safety equipment used in this video…Safety 1st, which doesn’t happen in this video, especially if you have used any caustic drain cleaner prior to taking the pipes apart…Thick Rubber Gloves, Long Sleeve Shirt, Safety Goggles and/or Face Shield…Be careful, people, this isn’t as easy as it looks or is made out to be in the video…Notice his trap had no water in it, either…

Dec 29, 2009
7:11 am
#2 Spkslayer666 :

I have a Q wat if the clog is in the wall and the snake some times goes through but the clog is still there and it feels like it’s hard? Any answers please

Dec 29, 2009
6:09 am
#3 Jason G :

The first step is to check with your local bank and realtors…there are also national grants available from the government. Take a look at this article 'How to Get a Home Improvement Grant' http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/459112/how_to_get_a_home_improvement_grant.html for some tips.

Good luck!

Dec 29, 2009
7:13 am
#4 Mr. D :

There are TONS of free classified websites that let you place free "service" ads. You can do a search by entering "free classified ads" and that will at least get you started and it's no cost!

Dec 29, 2009
7:16 am
#5 andy g :

No she was just his TV wife. Tim Allen was married to a woman named Laura Deibel from 1984-2003 and is currently married to a woman named Jane Hajduk, who he has been with since 2006.

Dec 29, 2009
7:38 pm
#6 FriendlyHomeServices :

The ONLY way that 1/4″ cable is going to work there is IF the clog is right at or before the vent stack. In many cases, the stoppage is further down the 2″ drain line that runs under the home, which would require using a cleanout and a 3/8″ – 5/8″ cable with the appropriate head attachment. The small hand snake in the video is better used on lavatory (hand sink) drains and tub drains. The man in the video is not an expert or a plumber, I am sad to write, so please be careful – Thank you.

Dec 29, 2009
10:42 pm
#7 brovin10 :

Interesting, but be careful that the information provided in this video is relevant to your Jurisdiction. Remember different parts of the world have different sink traps. Check out my channel for great tips and trick in DIY

Dec 30, 2009
4:12 am
#8 jtnoodle :

But that’s just a technical point. In this particular vid, I see no reason why a 5/16″ snake couldn’t be run right down the strainer, up to 50′ or however far the mainline connection is. I’ve been doing it that way for 17 years with zero callbacks.

Dec 30, 2009
12:40 am
#9 Buzzoodle :

Every women is passionate about their house and definitely go for home improvement reviews.
I have gone through your website. I saw affiliate ads, rather than becoming an affiliate i suggest you to introduce contextual ads in your web.
You can either get codes from google that help you to get your company listed in most frequent searches.

Dec 30, 2009
7:47 am
#10 FriendlyHomeServices :

That is what a Clean Out is for…If the stoppage is not in the p-trap, then put it all back together and use the clean out – some are under the sink but many are outside under the kitchen window – Using a Clean Out with a 1/2″ diameter cable will allow you to run water as you clear the stoppage…DO NOT put a hand snake like in the video down a clean out – it can loop up inside the 2″ pipe and then you have real troubles…Be careful, Please…

Dec 30, 2009
2:31 pm
#11 magichanzz :

HOBO's has a big selection of flooring at a discount price. There is one in Crest Hill (near Joliet)

Dec 30, 2009
2:40 pm
Dec 31, 2009
3:01 am
#13 Jess :

I'm not an experienced tiler, but I do know something about cutting metal.
You can use a pair of straight cut aviation snips. They will cut easily and cleanly. The only problem might be if the tile is embossed with a pattern. The cutting process will tend to flatten the relief along the edge of the cut.
Alternately, you can use a very fine tooth hacksaw (32 TPI) to cut them. Clamp the tile to your workbench, between wood blocks so it doesn't move around. Then use a fine file or sandpaper to smooth the edge. When you're working on metal it's a good idea to wear eye protection and a pair of gloves. Hope this helps.

Dec 31, 2009
3:46 am
#14 Misc :

I trust myself or my father who's been a carpenter for 50+ yrs. If we can't figure it out, it's not doable! Kind of snotty but we make a great team! Because of him I have my own company that I know run with a partner check us out at, http://www.dwelldesignbuild.com

Dec 31, 2009
4:32 am
#15 Family :

Most of the home improvement grants are for renovating property in low income areas, and you have to use the property for section 8 rentals, not your own home. google search it, I found the site that way. There are grants for everything you can think of. It's a .gov website. Don't subscribe to any service that wants to charge money for finding grants for you, those svcs. are just a scam. Anyone can research and apply. I spent two days scrolling through all of the grant information just to find out that I didn't qualify for anything. Some of them are pretty funny, I saw one grant for immigrants from Africa to study ancestrial drumming. The comedian David Letterman has set up a grant for " mediocre students with little ambition". The only grant I was eligible for was down payment assistance for first time homebuyers, the application process was so long I closed on the house and moved in before I heard anything.

Dec 31, 2009
5:07 pm
#16 lockoutxx :

Thanks alot!!!! I fixed my clogged drain. I almost called a plumber but im glad i watched your video first!!!!

Jan 1, 2010
8:11 am
#17 Bolshoi125 :

where can I buy that snake?

Jan 1, 2010
2:13 pm
#18 Shamborn :

see, I had HELL of a time just trying to get the snake to bend south after sticking it into the pipe in the wall (I hit the tee, I guess?). I never would’ve been able to do it if I’d gone through the sink.

I wish I could figure it out because it sounds like running water while you do it would be the optimum thing.

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