Financing is the second-most common barrier to ADU construction in Los Angeles (after permit timeline uncertainty). Most homeowners have substantial equity in their LA property but are not sure how to access it efficiently for ADU construction. This guide covers every ADU financing option available to California homeowners in 2026, from HELOCs and cash-out refinances to construction loans, ADU-specific programs, and the CalHFA ADU Grant Program. APLA Construction (CA Lic #1136359) works with homeowners throughout the financing process and can provide cost estimates that support your loan application.
Note: Loan products, rates, and program availability change frequently. Always verify current terms with a licensed mortgage lender. This guide is educational and not financial advice.
A HELOC is a revolving line of credit secured by your home equity. You draw against the line as needed during construction and only pay interest on the amount drawn. Most HELOCs have a 10-year draw period followed by a 20-year repayment period.
Homeowners with significant equity (typically 40%+ after the line is established) who want flexibility in draw timing. Works well for ADU construction because you draw in stages matching construction milestones rather than taking a lump sum upfront.
HELOC rates in California are variable, tied to prime rate. In early 2026, prime-based HELOCs are pricing in the 7.5–9.5% range depending on LTV and credit score. On a $120,000 ADU construction draw, that is approximately $750–$950/month in interest during the 10–14 month construction period.
A cash-out refinance replaces your existing mortgage with a new, larger mortgage. The difference between your old balance and the new balance is paid to you as cash at closing. You then use that cash to fund ADU construction.
Homeowners with an existing mortgage at a rate higher than current rates (less common in 2026 given the 2020–2022 low-rate period), or homeowners who want the simplicity of a single mortgage payment after completion.
Most LA homeowners who purchased or refinanced in 2020–2022 are sitting on 3–4% mortgage rates. A cash-out refi in 2026 at 7–8% on the full mortgage balance would significantly increase their monthly payment — often making a HELOC a much better choice. Run the numbers with your lender.
An ADU construction loan is a short-term loan (typically 12–18 months) that funds the ADU construction and then converts to a permanent second mortgage (or is paid off with a refinance or HELOC). Lenders review the project plans, contractor license, and estimated completed value (including ADU) before approving.
Homeowners with limited equity who need a larger loan than a HELOC provides, or homeowners who want a lender-controlled draw schedule tied to construction milestones.
The California Housing Finance Agency (CalHFA) has offered grants of up to $40,000 for qualifying homeowners to cover predevelopment costs for ADU construction. Predevelopment costs include: architectural and engineering fees, permit fees, site preparation, soil tests, and up to 10% of construction costs if incorporated into the design phase.
The CalHFA ADU Grant Program has income limits based on area median income (AMI). In Los Angeles County, income limits are adjusted for area — verify current limits at calhfa.ca.gov. The program has been heavily oversubscribed in previous rounds; check current availability.
Applications are submitted through CalHFA-approved lenders. APLA can provide the project cost documentation required for the application. Contact CalHFA or a participating lender (calhfa.ca.gov) for current program status and application periods.
A fixed-rate second mortgage against your home equity. Unlike a HELOC, you receive a lump sum at closing and make fixed monthly payments from day 1. Rates in 2026 are typically 7–10% fixed for 10–20 year terms.
Homeowners who want a fixed payment and know their total ADU budget upfront. Good for budget-disciplined projects where the total is well-defined.
Several California-specific companies offer ADU financing that is repaid through ADU rental income — essentially a revenue-sharing arrangement. The homeowner builds the ADU using the company financing; the company takes a share of rental income for a defined period (typically 10 years). At the end of the period, the homeowner owns the ADU outright with no debt. This is a niche product appropriate for homeowners with equity but limited cash flow for debt service.
For homeowners with liquid assets, paying cash for ADU construction avoids interest costs entirely. The after-tax cost of financing $120,000 at 8% for 10 years is approximately $53,000 in interest. Against a $29,000–$36,000 annual net rental income, the financing cost is recovered within 18–24 months of rental income — making financing generally attractive even for homeowners who could pay cash.
For most LA homeowners, a HELOC is the most flexible and cost-effective ADU financing option. It draws only as needed (minimizing interest during construction), has faster approval than a construction loan, and can be repaid with ADU rental income. Homeowners with 3–4% existing mortgages should avoid a cash-out refi and use a HELOC or home equity loan instead.
Program availability varies and has been subject to funding rounds. Check calhfa.ca.gov for current program status. When available, the grant covers up to $40,000 in predevelopment costs and does not need to be repaid — it is genuinely free money for qualifying homeowners. Apply as early as possible when new rounds open.
Many lenders now allow projected ADU rental income to be used to offset the new debt for qualification purposes. This is a significant change from earlier lending practices and makes ADU financing accessible to homeowners who would otherwise fail the debt-to-income ratio test. Ask your lender specifically about ADU rental income credit in their underwriting process.
For a HELOC: most lenders require 15–20% equity remaining after the line (i.e., your total debt including the HELOC cannot exceed 80–85% of your home value). For a $1.4M Encino home with a $700,000 mortgage: available HELOC capacity is approximately $490,000 (85% of $1.4M minus $700,000 existing balance) — well above a typical ADU budget. For most LA homeowners with pre-2022 purchase prices, equity is not a barrier.
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Email: info@aplaconstruction.com
CA General Contractor License #1136359
APLA provides detailed cost estimates that include the line-item breakdown lenders require for HELOC and construction loan applications. We work with your lender directly on any project documentation needed.
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