What to consider when your home and finances are impacted after a natural disaster
When a natural disaster damages or destroys your home, you face a critical decision: Should you rebuild on your property? Relocate to a new area? Buy an existing home?
There's no single right answer. The choice depends on your insurance coverage, family needs, financial resources and personal priorities. As you think about how to move forward, understanding your options and the key considerations for each path can help you make the decision that's right for your situation.
When to start thinking about your long-term housing decision
In the immediate aftermath, your focus is rightly on safety and securing temporary shelter. But within the first few months, you'll need to start thinking seriously about your permanent housing solution.
Most people begin evaluating their options once they have a clearer picture of their insurance coverage and can assess their financial situation. This typically happens somewhere between one and three months after the disaster. Take the time you need to think through it all. While temporary housing can feel unsettling, rushing into a permanent decision often leads to regret.
Rebuilding on your property
Rebuilding in the same location allows you to stay in a community you love and create a home designed exactly to your needs. You may want to rebuild if:
- The property holds sentimental or generational value.
- The land is irreplaceable or in a highly desirable location.
- You want to build back stronger with disaster-resilient upgrades.
- You can afford the time and complexity of rebuilding.
- You have adequate insurance to cover most rebuild costs.
Relocating to a new area
Some people use this moment as an opportunity to move to a different community entirely, whether to reduce future risk, be closer to family or pursue a lifestyle change. You may want to relocate if:
- Your original location now feels too high-risk or has become uninsurable.
- You're ready to downsize, retire or make a significant life change.
- The cost to rebuild substantially exceeds the property’s future value.
- You have multiple properties and can shift where you live primarily.
- Family or career considerations point you elsewhere.
Buying an existing home
Instead of rebuilding from scratch, you might purchase a move-in ready home, either in your original area or somewhere new. You may want to buy an existing home if:
- Time is of the essence due to family needs, work requirements or school schedules.
- Your destroyed property was significantly underinsured.
- You don't want to manage the complexity and uncertainty of a rebuild.
- Available inventory meets your needs.
- You prefer the predictability of knowing exactly what you're getting.
What drives the decision
Beyond the practical considerations for each option, several overarching factors tend to drive which path people choose.
How to finance your decision
Once you've decided on your path forward, you'll need to fund it. A Merrill advisor and lending specialist can help you structure a solution that meets your needs.
For immediate liquidity needs.
If you need cash quickly for deposits, temporary housing or starting a purchase or rebuild before insurance proceeds arrive, securities-based loans like a Loan Management Account® (LMA account) from Bank of America1 offer quick and easy access to funds. An LMA account allows you to borrow against your Merrill investment portfolio without having to disrupt your investments or potentially trigger capital gains taxes. You have a choice between fixed and variable-rate structures with flexible repayment options — and there are no minimum balance requirements or annual fees.
For rebuilding or building on a new lot.
Residential lot loans are designed to finance the purchase of a residential lot for future construction. Construction-to-permanent financing2 provides a two-phase loan that covers both the cost of building a home and the long-term mortgage that follows. You'll make interest-only payments during the build and the loan automatically transitions to a standard mortgage when construction is finished.
For purchasing a new home.
Traditional mortgages, home equity from other properties through a Home Equity Line of Credit, or securities-based lending like a Loan Management Account1 can all play a role depending on your situation and timeline. Your advisor can help you evaluate which approach offers the most favorable terms while preserving your investment strategy.
Looking at your full financial picture.
“The hardest part is that the world's moved on, and we're still suffering," reflects Nadia Allaudin, a Merrill advisor who lost her home and is now rebuilding. Recovery involves not just the emotional work but also managing significant financial complexity. Your advisor can help you look across your entire balance sheet to identify the best sources of capital, structure financing efficiently and plan for any gaps between insurance proceeds and your actual costs.
Getting the support you need
There's no perfect choice when it comes to rebuilding your life after a disaster. But there is an appropriate choice for your specific circumstances, values and financial situation. Your advisor can help you:
- Understand your actual insurance coverage and potential funding gaps.
- Model the financial implications of rebuild, relocate and buy scenarios.
- Explore financing options that match your timeline and situation.
- Connect with lending specialists for construction or mortgage needs.
- Coordinate with your tax advisor and attorney on related planning.
- Provide objective guidance when you're feeling overwhelmed.
Beyond the financial aspects, don't hesitate to lean on family, friends, your community or mental health professionals. The emotional toll of losing your home is real, and taking care of yourself and your family is just as important as making sound financial decisions.
Take time to understand your options. Talk with your family about what matters most. Work with your advisor to structure a financial plan that supports your decision. And give yourself grace throughout the process.
A Private Wealth Advisor can help you get started.
1 The Loan Management Account (LMA account) is a demand line of credit provided by Bank of America, N.A., Member FDIC. Equal Opportunity Lender. The LMA account requires a brokerage account at Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated and sufficient eligible collateral to support a minimum credit facility size of $100,000. All securities are subject to credit approval, and Bank of America, N.A., may change its collateral maintenance requirements at any time. Securities-based financing involves special risks and is not for everyone. When considering a securities-based loan, consideration should be given to individual requirements, portfolio composition and risk tolerance, as well as capital gains, portfolio performance expectations and investment time horizon. The securities or other assets in any collateral account may be sold to meet a collateral call without notice to the client, the client is not entitled to an extension of time on the collateral call, and the client is not entitled to choose which securities or other assets will be sold. The client can lose more funds than deposited in such collateral account. The LMA account is uncommitted, and Bank of America, N.A., may demand full repayment at any time. A complete description of the loan terms can be found within the LMA account agreement. Clients should consult their own independent tax and legal advisors. Some restrictions may apply to purpose loans, and not all managed accounts are eligible as collateral. All applications for LMA accounts are subject to approval by Bank of America, N.A. For fixed-rate and term advances, principal payments made prior to the due date will be subject to a breakage fee.
2 Borrower is responsible for fees. Minimum borrower liquidity of $3,000,000 or $5,000,000 net worth (including primary residence), and $1,000,000 post-closing liquidity. The minimum loan amount is $2,000,000. Other restrictions apply, ask for details. Custom residential real estate financing may involve special risks and is not suitable for everyone. Please obtain advice from your third-party legal, tax, insurance and accounting advisors before changing or implementing any financial, tax or estate planning strategy and to determine what custom residential real estate solution might be right for you.
Please consult your tax advisor regarding interest deductibility.
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc., does not make commitments for fund loans. Bank of America, N.A., (the “Bank”) does not serve in a fiduciary capacity with respect to all products or services. Fiduciary standards or fiduciary duties do not apply, for example, when the Bank is offering or providing credit solutions, banking or custody services or referrals to other affiliates of the Bank.