Learn about the four ways a Unison Equity Sharing Agreement can end, including selling your home or choosing a buyout.
Learn about your roles in an Equity Sharing Agreement. We help you keep your home safe while you access your cash.
Learn how you can keep the value from your home improvements. We explain the Remodeling Adjustment in our Equity Sharing Agreement.
Learn how we share in the ups and downs of your home's value. Discover how an Equity Sharing Agreement works when it is time to sell or finish your term.
Learn how Unison determines your home’s value through OAV and EAV. Our guide covers appraisals, risk adjustments, and closing fees for equity sharing.
Learn how a Equity Sharing Agreement can help you access home value without monthly payments or interest. Discover a new way to fund your life goals.
If you’ve built up meaningful equity in your home and could use some extra flexibility, you’ve probably come across something called a Home Equity Investment (HEI).
Homeownership allows you to build equity over time both as you pay down your mortgage, and property values appreciate. This equity contributes to your overall net worth; it’s a valuable asset.
Tapping into your home equity is a great way to access funds for immediate financial needs. While selling your home is one way to achieve this goal, there are many other solutions that allow you to take equity out of your home.
Cash-out refinancing can be a good option for homeowners who need quick access to funds, but it's not the right move for everyone. Fortunately, there are other options available to you.
You’ve probably heard it’s good to build equity in your home. But what is home equity, exactly? How can you calculate the equity you have in your home? What can you even use that home equity to do?
If your child is making the transition to college this year, you yourself may be anticipating a transition of your own: the “empty nest.”
Technically, the “Accessory Dwelling Unit” (ADU) has been around since the 1980s, though the concept itself is much older. If the phrase doesn’t ring a bell, you might know it better as “granny house” or “backyard cottage.”