A $15,000-$25,000 roof replacement isn’t usually a cash purchase. Most Illinois homeowners finance the project across one of several common paths. This guide compares them – contractor-offered financing, home equity products, unsecured loans, credit cards – with realistic rates and pros/cons for each.
Option 1: Contractor-offered financing
Most established roofing contractors (Trill Roofing included) partner with consumer finance companies that offer point-of-sale financing for the project. Common terms:
- 0% APR promotional periods – typically 12-24 months, sometimes 60+ months for higher-tier programs
- Standard APR after promo – 15-30% (high if you don’t pay off during the promo)
- Loan amounts – typically $5,000-$100,000
- Approval speed – same-day approval at signing
- Credit requirements – most programs require 650+ FICO; some have lower thresholds
Best for: homeowners who can pay off within the promotional 0% period. The convenience of point-of-sale + 0% interest if paid on time is hard to beat.
Worst case: if you don’t pay off during the promo, the deferred interest can hit retroactively (depending on program). Read the terms.
Option 2: Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC)
If you have home equity, a HELOC lets you borrow against it at variable rates.
- Current IL HELOC rates (2026): typically prime + 0-2%, so 8-12% APR
- Limits: up to 80-90% of home equity
- Setup time: 30-60 days for new HELOCs; immediate use if you already have one
- Repayment: interest-only during draw period (typically 10 years), then principal + interest for 10-20 years
- Tax deductibility: interest may be tax-deductible if used for home improvement (consult your tax advisor)
Best for: homeowners with existing HELOCs who can draw against them immediately, or those planning multiple home improvements and wanting flexible access to capital.
Drawbacks: variable rate exposure if you don’t pay quickly; secured by your home (default consequences).
Option 3: Home Equity Loan (second mortgage)
Fixed-rate loan against home equity. More predictable than a HELOC.
- Current IL rates (2026): typically 7-10%
- Terms: 10-20 years typical
- Setup: 30-60 days
- Tax deductibility: may apply if used for home improvement
Best for: homeowners who want a fixed payment over 5-10 years for the roof investment.
Option 4: Unsecured personal loan
Personal loans from banks, credit unions, or online lenders (SoFi, LightStream, Marcus, etc.):
- Current rates (2026): 8-18% APR depending on credit
- Amounts: $5,000-$100,000 typical
- Terms: 2-7 years
- Setup speed: 1-5 business days
- Not secured by your home
Best for: homeowners who don’t have enough equity for a HELOC or who don’t want the home as collateral.
LightStream is consistently competitive on home improvement personal loans for borrowers with strong credit (700+ FICO). Local IL credit unions (Scott Credit Union, Together Credit Union) also offer competitive rates.
Option 5: Credit card
Generally the most expensive option but situationally useful:
- Standard credit card APR: 18-29%
- 0% intro APR cards: typically 15-21 months at 0%, then standard rates
- Useful for emergencies when you need to act in days, not weeks
- Earn rewards/cashback on the spending if your card has them
Best for: if you have a 0% intro APR card with room and can pay off during the promo. Treat exactly like contractor 0% financing.
Otherwise: avoid for major projects. The interest cost over even 1-2 years is significant.
Option 6: Cash from savings (when it makes sense)
Paying cash from savings is often the cheapest option (no interest cost) but has tradeoffs:
- Opportunity cost – money in savings or investments could be earning more than the loan would cost
- Liquidity – emergency fund needs to stay intact
- Discount potential – some contractors offer 1-3% cash discounts for full-payment-up-front
If you have $25,000+ in liquid savings beyond emergency reserves and the contractor offers a cash discount, paying cash makes sense. If you’re depleting emergency reserves, financing usually makes more sense.
Decision framework
Quick decision framework:
- Have cash and contractor offers discount → pay cash
- Can pay off in 12-24 months → contractor 0% financing or 0% intro APR credit card
- Need 3-7 year repayment → personal loan from a local credit union
- Have substantial home equity, want flexible access → HELOC
- Want predictable fixed payments over 10 years → home equity loan
- Have insurance claim funding → use insurance funds first; finance only the difference (your deductible)
Get pricing first, then decide on financing
Trill Roofing’s inspection produces a written quote so you know the actual number before deciding on financing. Schedule at /free-inspection/.
Related Trill Roofing Services
Get a free roof inspection from Trill Roofing
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