Sale-Leaseback vs Refinancing in the U.S. in 2026

The average 30-year refinance rate sits at 6.68% in May 2026. And 82.8% of U.S. homeowners with mortgages already carry rates below 6%. If you're thinking about refinancing to pull cash out of your home, the math may surprise you.
A home sale-leaseback might get you more: faster, with no new debt, and without touching your credit score.
This post breaks down exactly how these two options compare, where each one wins, and how to decide which path makes sense for your situation.
The Real Cost of a Cash-Out Refinance in 2026
Before you refinance, run the full math. Not just the rate.
Today's average 30-year refinance rate is 6.68% (Zillow, May 2026), and closing costs typically run 2%–6% of the loan amount. On a $300,000 loan, that's $6,000–$18,000 out of pocket before you see a single dollar of equity.
You'll also need to clear several hurdles just to qualify:
- Minimum 620 credit score for a conventional loan
- Verified income and a debt-to-income ratio your lender approves
- Sufficient home equity (typically 20%+ to avoid mortgage insurance)
- A hard credit inquiry, which will temporarily ding your score
And here's the part most lenders won't lead with: if you locked in a sub-4% rate during the pandemic years, refinancing means trading that rate away permanently. You'd swap a historically low mortgage for today's rates, and carry that higher payment for the life of the loan.
According to Redfin data, 82.8% of mortgaged homeowners still have rates below 6%. For most of them, refinancing is an expensive path to cash, even when it's technically available.
What a Home Sale-Leaseback Actually Gets You
A home sale-leaseback works differently. Because it's not a loan.
You sell your home to an investor at fair market value, receive your equity as a lump sum of cash at closing, and sign a lease agreement that lets you stay in the home as a renter. You keep living there. You just no longer own it.
Here's what that means practically:
- No new debt. You're not borrowing against your home. You're selling it and getting paid.
- No credit check. Approval is based on your home's equity and value, not your FICO score.
- No income verification. There's no lender reviewing your DTI ratio or pay stubs.
- Fast closing. Sale-leasebacks can close in as little as 2-3 weeks, compared to 30-60+ days for a refinance.
- You stay home. This is the defining feature: you sell and stay. There's no move, no disruption, no searching for a new place.
American homeowners are sitting on a record $17.1 trillion in home equity as of late 2025 (Cotality, formerly CoreLogic). For the average homeowner, that's roughly $299,000 locked inside the walls of their property. A sale-leaseback converts that locked equity into liquid cash, without adding a dollar to your monthly debt load.
Head-to-Head: Sale-Leaseback vs. Cash-Out Refinance
Here's the full comparison across every factor that matters for homeowners weighing these two options:
Decision Checkpoints: Which Option Is Right for You?
Neither option is universally better. The right path depends on your situation. Use these checkpoints to find yours:
A Cash-Out Refinance may make more sense if:
- You have a strong credit score (740+) and verified income
- You have a mortgage rate above 6.5% and refinancing would actually lower your payment
- You want to keep long-term ownership and bet on future appreciation
- You only need a moderate amount of cash relative to your equity
A Home Sale-Leaseback may make more sense if:
- Your credit score is below 680, or income verification is complicated
- You want or need cash quickly, within weeks, not months
- You want to eliminate your mortgage payment entirely
- You need access to most or all of your home equity, not just a portion
- You'd rather have cash in hand than a bet on future appreciation
- You have no plans to move, and want to stay in your home long-term
How the Sell2Rent Process Works
Sell2Rent is the only dual marketplace connecting homeowners directly with multiple competing investor offers. That competition means you get fair market value, not a discounted offer from a single buyer.
Sell2Rent covers all 50 states for single-family homes, condos, and townhomes, and it's designed for homeowners who need real options, not another loan application.
The Bottom Line
Refinancing in 2026 is more expensive and more restrictive than it was two years ago. Rates are elevated, requirements are strict, and trading your low-rate mortgage for a new one is a decision that deserves serious scrutiny.
A home sale-leaseback doesn't compete with refinancing on every dimension. But on the dimensions that matter most to homeowners who need cash without disrupting their lives, it wins clearly: no debt, no credit barrier, faster closing, and you stay home.
The right choice depends on your numbers and your goals. The most important thing is that you run both options with full information, not just the rate a bank leads with.
Data Sources
- Zillow / Fortune: Average 30-year refinance rate, May 2026 (6.68%)
- LendingTree / Freddie Mac: Weekly U.S. mortgage rates, May 21, 2026 (6.51% / 5.85%)
- Redfin Q3 2024: 82.8% of mortgaged homeowners carry rates below 6%
- Cotality (formerly CoreLogic), Q3 2025: $17.1 trillion total U.S. home equity
- Fortune / Amerisave: Refinance closing costs 2%-6% of loan amount; $6,000-$18,000 on $300K loan
- The Mortgage Reports / Experian: Minimum 620 credit score for conventional refinance
- Sell2Rent.com: Best Sale-Leaseback Companies for U.S. Homeowners in 2026. $299,000 avg equity per homeowner
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