I’ve got a mortgage offer on my new home – is it worth the £1,499 fee?

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Question: I’m getting a mortgage of £180,000 on a £200,000 property. The rate I have secured looks good – it’s around 4.8 per cent over five years – but it comes with a hefty £1,499 fee. How important is the fee when getting the loan? Is it worth going for a worse rate with a lower fee?

Answer: Congratulations on securing a mortgage offer of £180,000 on a £200,000 property. This is with an appealing interest rate of 4.8 per cent over five years – I assume it’s the deal from HSBC.

It’s understandable to question the product fee of £1,499, which is on the higher end. You may be considering whether going for a lower £999 fee or a fee-free option from Virgin Money at 4.89 per cent might be a better choice. The product fee raises several important questions that need careful consideration.

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‘I’m a property expert – this is why mortgage interest rates are dropping slowly’

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In positive news for mortgage borrowers, the Bank of England finally has lowered the central interest rate for the first time in four years.

Millions of homeowners are due to come off their cheaper fixed-rate mortgage deals in the coming months, leaving many questioning what type of deal to go for next.

With a 0.25 percent cut to five percent, the Base Rate is still high and the impact won’t be felt “widely”, an expert has said. However, there are deals people may want to opt for to put them in a more “favourable” position for the years ahead.

We asked Andrew Boast, a property expert at SAM Conveyancing the current mortgage market trends, his expectations for rates over the next few months, and what length deals people should look into based on current forecasts.

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Connells says: “No sign of landlords quitting buy to let sector”

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In a statement which appears to go against the trend of much of the lettings sector, Connells says it sees no sign of landlords quitting the buy to let sector.

This appears at odds with data from some organisations and agencies – including Hamptons, owned by Connells – which appear to show fewer landlords in the sector now than in recent years.

But the Connells Group – in its trading statement for the first half of 2024 – says rental supply ended June with 24% more properties available than at June 2023.

And it says that the company “saw no significant signs of landlords exiting the market” with some 77% of properties re-let at the end of their tenancies. That’s the same figure as last year. 

The average tenancy length was 30.9 months, about 10% up on a year ago.

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House prices record FASTEST annual growth since December 2022 last month, says Nationwide

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House prices recorded the fastest pace of annual growth since December 2022, according to Nationwide Building Society.

Britain’s biggest mutual revealed the average house price rose by 0.3 per cent between June and July.

Annually, house prices are up by 2.1 per cent, with the typical home now worth £266,334 – this is the biggest annual rise recorded over the past 18 months.

However, average prices are still around 2.8 per cent below the all-time highs recorded in the summer of 2022. 

Property prices reached £273,751 in August 2022, before falling to lows of £257,656 at the start of this year.

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Unauthorised mortgage broker among four ordered to pay £4m by High Court

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The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has secured an order of £4m against an unauthorised mortgage broker firm and its associates who the regulator said, “exploited vulnerable consumers”.

The judgment found that the defendants arranged high interest, “unaffordable” bridging loans for people who were about to be evicted from their homes. In some cases, the defendants bought homes from the people facing repossession for less than valued, then rented the properties back to them. 

It was found that the firm London Property Investments (LPI) arranged mortgages while NPI Holdings Limited (NPI) bought properties and rented them back to the sellers, both without regulatory authorisation. Daniel Stevens, the director of LPI and NPI, and his father, Tony Stevens, were also found liable.  

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‘All’ UK households on mortgage rate under 4.5 per cent warned

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Mortgage payers and business owners have been warned that higherrates are here to STAY despite the interest rate cut from the Bank of England last week. Bank documents show policymakers expect that level to be about 3.5% in three years’ time, with mortgages staying around the 4.5 per cent and five per cent level.

Claire, a maternity support worker from Portsmouth, told the Guardian newspaper her family moved into their house in January 2022 on a 1.99% two-year fixed repayment mortgage, paying £1,042 a month. Since then their mortgage payments have risen by more than £500 a month to £1,596.90.

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Landlord tax crackdown has created a rental crisis, says Foxtons

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Successive tax raids on buy-to-let investors have fuelled Britain’s rental crisis, the boss of Foxtons has said.

Guy Gittins, who heads up the London-focused estate agent, said private landlords have been driven away by a dearth of government incentives, which has reduced the number of available properties to rent.

The UK’s housing crisis has only worsened since the pandemic, he said, prompting the recent surge in rental costs.

According to Mr Gittins, the previous Conservative government “created an environment that was not attractive or profitable” for new landlords to enter the market.

He said: “It needs to be taken very seriously. We need anything that will encourage people back into the private rented sector.

“Ultimately, the UK needs tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of extra rental [homes] to manage the price growth and make sure it is tempered as much as possible in the medium term.”

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Essex landlord banned for three years after HMO court case

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A rogue landlord who was also a letting agent in Essex has been banned from being a landlord for three years.

Ruhul Mohammed Shamsuddin is now prevented by law from letting houses, engaging in letting agency work or managing properties, and could face both imprisonment and a fine of up to £30,000 if he breaks the banning order, which applies to England only.

He is also prevented from being involved in any company that carries out any of the duties outlined above.

His banning order has been secured via a First Tier Tribunal Property Chamber after Shamsuddin was convicted last year of half a dozen offences in relation to a property at 12, Clifftown Road in Southend-on-Sea (main image) at Colchester Crown Court.

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What’s happening to buy-to-let mortgage rates?

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Average buy-to-let (BTL) mortgage rates have fallen to the lowest levels since September 2022, but remain well above 5%.

While falling rates are good news for landlords, those due to remortgage will face higher repayments, and investors might still think twice before expanding their portfolios.

Here, Which? explains what’s happening to BTL rates and reveals the cheapest deals currently on the market.

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