Understanding the Two Types of Reverse Mortgages
Reverse mortgages allow homeowners age 62 or older to convert home equity into cash without making monthly mortgage payments. The two primary categories are the Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM), which is insured by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), and proprietary reverse mortgages, which are private-label products offered by individual lenders without government insurance. While both serve the same fundamental purpose, they differ significantly in structure, cost, borrower protections, and suitability depending on home value and financial circumstances.
FHA Lending Limits vs. No Cap on Proprietary Products
The most consequential difference between HECM and proprietary reverse mortgages involves lending limits. HECM loans are subject to the FHA maximum claim amount, which is tied to the conforming loan limit set annually by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. For 2025, the HECM lending limit is ,209,750, meaning even if a home is worth million, the HECM calculation uses ,209,750 as the maximum appraised value. Proprietary reverse mortgages have no federally mandated ceiling. Lenders set their own limits, and some proprietary products accommodate home values of million or more. For homeowners whose properties significantly exceed the FHA limit, proprietary products may unlock substantially more equity. However, HECM loans remain the better fit for the majority of borrowers whose home values fall at or below the FHA ceiling, because HECM offers stronger consumer protections and more regulated fee structures.
Mortgage Insurance Premiums and Fee Structures
HECM loans carry mandatory FHA mortgage insurance premiums (MIP). Borrowers pay an initial MIP of 2% of the home’s appraised value (or the FHA limit, whichever is less) at closing, plus an annual MIP of 0.50% of the outstanding loan balance, accrued monthly. This insurance is what guarantees the non-recourse protection on HECM loans, ensuring borrowers or their heirs will never owe more than the home’s fair market value at the time of repayment. Proprietary reverse mortgages do not carry FHA insurance premiums. However, the absence of MIP does not necessarily mean lower total costs. Proprietary lenders may charge higher origination fees, higher interest rates, or build costs into the loan structure in other ways. Some proprietary products do offer lower upfront costs than HECM, particularly for borrowers with high-value homes where the 2% initial MIP on a HECM would be substantial. Borrowers should compare the total cost of borrowing across both product types using detailed loan estimates rather than focusing on any single fee component. For a full breakdown of reverse mortgage fee categories, see Reverse Mortgage Costs and Fees.
Counseling Requirements and Consumer Protections
HECM loans require borrowers to complete a counseling session with a HUD-approved counseling agency before the loan application can proceed. This session covers loan mechanics, alternatives to reverse mortgages, repayment obligations, and the borrower’s financial assessment. The counseling requirement exists to ensure borrowers fully understand the product before committing. Proprietary reverse mortgages are not bound by HUD counseling mandates. Some proprietary lenders voluntarily require or recommend counseling, but many do not. This gap in consumer protection is significant, borrowers considering proprietary products should strongly consider seeking independent counseling regardless of whether the lender requires it. HECM loans also carry a guaranteed non-recourse clause backed by FHA insurance: neither the borrower nor heirs will owe more than the home is worth when the loan comes due. Proprietary reverse mortgages may include non-recourse provisions, but these are contractual terms set by individual lenders rather than federally mandated guarantees. Borrowers should carefully review proprietary loan documents to confirm non-recourse language and understand any conditions or exceptions.
Payout Options, Property Types, and Age Requirements
HECM loans offer five standard payout options: lump sum (fixed rate only), monthly tenure payments (for as long as the borrower lives in the home), monthly term payments (for a set period), a line of credit with a growth feature, or a combination of monthly payments and line of credit. The HECM line of credit growth feature (where the unused credit line grows over time at the same rate as the loan balance), is unique to HECM and has no equivalent in most proprietary products. Proprietary reverse mortgages typically offer fewer payout options. Most proprietary products provide a lump sum or a line of credit, but tenure payments and the growth feature are generally unavailable. The flexibility of HECM payout options makes them preferable for borrowers who want structured monthly income or the strategic advantage of a growing credit line. Both HECM and most proprietary reverse mortgages require borrowers to be at least 62 years old. Some proprietary lenders have set their minimum age at 60 or even 55, though these lower-age products typically come with more restrictive terms and lower principal limits. HECM loans are available on single-family homes, 2-4 unit owner-occupied properties, HUD-approved condominiums, and manufactured homes meeting FHA standards. Proprietary reverse mortgages may accept a broader range of property types, including some condominiums that do not meet HUD approval requirements and higher-value properties that fall outside typical FHA program parameters.
When Each Product Makes Sense
HECM is the appropriate choice for most reverse mortgage borrowers. It offers federally regulated fee structures, mandatory counseling, guaranteed non-recourse protection, flexible payout options including the unique line of credit growth feature, and FHA insurance backing. Borrowers whose home values fall at or below the FHA lending limit will almost always find HECM to be the more cost-effective and better-protected option. Proprietary reverse mortgages serve a narrower but important niche: homeowners with high-value properties that significantly exceed the FHA lending limit. If a borrower owns a home worth .5 million or more, a proprietary product may allow access to considerably more equity than a HECM. Proprietary products may also be relevant for borrowers who own property types not eligible for HECM, or for borrowers between ages 55 and 61 in states where proprietary lenders offer lower-age products. Before choosing a proprietary reverse mortgage, borrowers should confirm non-recourse protections, compare total loan costs (including the absence of MIP versus potentially higher origination fees or rates), and consider completing independent counseling. For additional context on how reverse mortgages fit within broader retirement and estate planning, see Reverse Mortgages and Estate Planning.