Reverse Mortgage in Pomona, California: Using Your Home Equity at 62+
Pomona homeowners who've held their home for years have typically built meaningful equity as values rose — equity a reverse mortgage can help you access at 62+. The typical Pomona home is worth about $688,213 as of May 2026 (Zillow Home Value Index). Here's how a reverse mortgage works for Pomona homeowners — and the responsibilities that come with it.
Using your Pomona home equity in retirement
The typical Pomona home is worth about $688,213 as of May 2026 (Zillow Home Value Index). For homeowners 62 and older (some proprietary programs start at 55), a reverse mortgage can turn part of that equity into funds — with no required monthly mortgage payment, as long as you continue to pay property taxes and homeowners insurance, keep up the home, and live there as your primary residence.
Who qualifies in Pomona?
- Age. 62+ for an FHA-insured HECM; some proprietary/jumbo programs start at 55.
- Primary residence. The home must be where you live most of the year.
- Sufficient equity. With Pomona values where they are, many long-time owners qualify — the exact amount depends on the youngest borrower's age, the home, and current program limits, not a flat number.
- Counseling. Independent, HUD-approved counseling is required so you understand the trade-offs before anything is signed.
Reverse mortgage vs. a HELOC in Pomona
A HELOC is a line you draw on and repay monthly; a reverse mortgage has no required monthly mortgage payment (you still cover taxes, insurance, and upkeep) and is repaid when you leave the home. Which fits depends on your age, income, and how long you plan to stay. See the full side-by-side: reverse mortgage vs. HELOC in California, and how a reverse mortgage works.
What Pomona homeowners should know
- You still own your home. You keep the title; the loan is repaid when the last borrower leaves, sells, or passes away.
- You remain responsible for property taxes, homeowners insurance, and maintaining the home — falling behind on those can put the loan in default.
- It reduces the equity you and your heirs have over time, since the balance grows. Heirs can repay the loan and keep the home, or sell to settle it.
- Not a government program. A HECM is FHA-insured, but this is not a government benefit and I am not affiliated with or endorsed by HUD, FHA, or any government agency.
See if a reverse mortgage fits your Pomona home
No credit pulled to see your options, and counseling is included. A real licensed loan officer reviews it — not a call center.
Explore my options →Rather just talk it through? Call or text me — (323) 886-7676
Educational information only — not an offer or commitment to lend.Frequently asked questions
Do I still own my home with a reverse mortgage in Pomona?
Yes. You keep the title and can stay in the home as long as it remains your primary residence and you keep up property taxes, homeowners insurance, and upkeep. A reverse mortgage is a loan that must be repaid when the last borrower sells, moves out, or passes away.
Are there monthly payments?
There is no required monthly mortgage payment on a reverse mortgage. You do remain responsible for property taxes, homeowners insurance, and maintaining the home — and the loan balance grows over time because interest and fees are added to it.
Who qualifies for a reverse mortgage in Pomona?
Generally homeowners 62 or older for an FHA-insured HECM (some proprietary programs start at 55), living in the home as a primary residence, with enough equity. With the typical Pomona home around $688,213 (May 2026, Zillow), many long-time owners have meaningful equity — the amount available depends on the youngest borrower's age and the home, not a flat figure.
Is a reverse mortgage a government benefit?
No. A HECM is insured by the FHA, but a reverse mortgage is a loan, not a government benefit, and I am not affiliated with or endorsed by HUD, the FHA, or any government agency. Independent counseling is required before closing.
What happens to my heirs?
When the loan comes due, heirs can repay the balance and keep the home, or sell the home to settle the loan and keep any remaining equity. Because the balance grows over time, less equity typically remains than with a home you own free and clear.
Local home-value data: Zillow Home Value Index, May 2026. Last reviewed June 28, 2026 by Kelvin Craver, Licensed Mortgage Loan Originator (NMLS #2009272). Educational information only — not financial advice, an offer, or a commitment to lend.