First Time Buyer Mortgage Advice
HELP IS AT HAND FOR FIRST TIME BUYERS
"First time buyers
finding it more and more difficult to get on to the property
ladder!"
"Average house prices
expected to triple to £300,000 by 2020."
"Deposits nearly four
times bigger than five years ago."
Most of us are familiar with
these sorts of headlines and are aware of the air of despondency
hanging over those trying to buy their first home, but are
things really that bad?
The current perception that
obtaining a first time mortgage is difficult is, in many ways,
misguided. It is probably no more difficult now than it was
25 years ago indeed, with the increased flexibility offered
by many lenders it could be said to be easier.
According to Nationwide the
house price income ratio, based on the number of years annual
income needed to buy a house is almost exactly in line with
its historical average. Lower mortgage interest rates mean
mortgages take up just 20% of gross income, compared to almost
50% at the height of the boom in the 1980s. More and more
lenders are now offering 100% mortgages and, in some circumstances
it is perfectly possible to achieve 125% borrowing.
Many potential first time buyers,
attempting to obtain a mortgage give up far too easily this
is often because they have approached a single lender and
not approached a specialist company who will have a detailed
knowledge of the whole market. A recent example is an enquiry
received where a client had been offered a maximum loan of
£85,000, while we at Westexe, were able to achieve £107,000
If you're stuck in rented accommodation
and you're becoming increasingly irritated listening to smug
homeowners boasting about how much their property has increased
in value what can you do? Whether you're living alone or sharing
with friends, it's hard to avoid comments about how much better
off you'd be if you bought. This is far easier said than done
if you're single and even if you're on a relatively good salary
it can be almost impossible to get the deposit together, let
alone borrow enough to buy a property
It's a different matter for
those lucky enough to have parents who are financially secure
enough to help out with deposits or act as guarantors. Couples
have it a little easier. Single earners can usually borrow
up to three or three and a half times their income whilst
couples can expect to borrow up to two and three quarters
or possibly three times the joint income. An increasing number
of lenders are also offering 100% mortgages but these can
be less flexible as lenders reckon it is easier to walk away.
One way out of the rental trap
is to buy with friends. An increasing number of people are
clubbing together in order to yet on the property ladder instead
of struggling to get a one-bedroom cupboard on a single salary,
some first time buyers are joining forces and managing to
secure a larger property against a combined income. Whilst
this may seem a logical solution, there are a number of areas
where caution should be exercised
Taking on a mortgage together,
either as tenants in common or joint tenants, is a serious
financial commitment, which needs to be drawn up in law. You
need to draw up a legal agreement in case one party wants
to sell or loses their job: such agreements can specify that
if one stops paying, they lose their rights in the property.
But for friends or partners prepared to make the commitment,
buying together is one easy and affordable way onto the property
ladder
Legally, up to four people can
take out a mortgage together but that does not mean that they
can raise four times as much money as a single person. Very
few UK financial institutions will consider lending against
all four incomes and only a few will take three incomes into
account. Most lenders will usually allow three times the main
income plus the sum of the other incomes.
It should be stressed that everyone
involved is jointly and separately liable for the mortgage.
That means that if something goes wrong, for whatever reason
and whoever's fault it is, it may fall on the others to make
up the balance of the mortgage repayments in the event of
arrears, everyone will be tainted with the same bad debt record,
even those who have been good payers.
Shared ownership can also be
an avenue worth exploring for the first time buyer Housing
associations such as Devon and Cornwall Housing Association
and Sovereign Housing Association are working to make homes
available to first time buyers.
Under the shared ownership scheme,
you buy a share of the property and pay rent on the remaining
share you do not own. You can then go on to buy further shares,
and eventually own your home outright.
So are you going to remain on
the fence or, like many others in your situation, look back
in years to come and wish you had been more active in seeking
out a mortgage and getting your foot firmly on the property
ladder? Remember, your landlords probably struggled to get
on the property ladder themselves but now its possibly you
that's paying their mortgage Why not pay your own?
Click
here to contact Westexe Mortgages for free, no obligation
advice on first time buyer mortgages.
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