First-time buyers’ mortgage with £5,000 deposit and £500k limit launched – but there are some restrictions

Interest-Rates.Info - UK Mortgage & Property News - Birmingham Money - West Bromwich Money - Mortgage Brokers

Other lenders also offer low deposit deals aimed at young buyers – and experts caution those with a high loan-to-value ratio should try to overpay to reduce the risk of getting into negative equity.

First-time buyers are being offered the chance to pay a modest £5,000 deposit and potentially borrow up to 99% of a property’s value.

The mortgage from Yorkshire Building Society is valid on places up to £500,000 and comes without a fee – but there are a few key exceptions.

It’s not available for flats or new-build properties and would-be borrowers must pass strict affordability and credit scoring checks.

The task of saving for a deposit is one of the barriers that many first-time buyers struggle with as most lenders like a minimum 10% up front.

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Could my mortgage cost me more than I make from house price rises?

Interest-Rates.Info - UK Mortgage & Property News - Birmingham Money - West Bromwich Money - Mortgage Brokers

When people buy a home they tend to think they are making a sound investment, as prices tend to rise in the long run.

But unless they are a cash buyer, they require a mortgage from a lender in order to purchase a property.

They will then spend decades repaying that mortgage, with a large portion of their monthly payments going on interest.

While it’s easy to know how much they’ve made from house price growth when they come to sell, homeowners usually pay less attention to how much the mortgage has cost them in the meantime.

With mortgage rates having risen over the past two years, it means the total amount paid back is more likely to have superseded any gains made by house price growth during that time.  

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Mortgage interest rates: when will they come down?

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Mortgage rates have fallen below 6% on average, but borrowers must still grapple with higher costs to get on or move up the property ladder. 

Last year, customers saw mortgage pricing hiked by consecutive increases to the base rate, as the Bank of England (BoE) attempted to tackle chronically high inflation levels.

But recently, there has been a “plateau” in interest rates, said Forbes Advisor, made possible in part by “continued cooling inflation”. The latest figures show inflation dropped from 4% in January to 3.4% in February. In addition, at the end of March, the Bank of England once again kept interest rates unchanged “as was widely expected”, the website added. 

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Bank to offer 40-year interest-only mortgages

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A bank is increasing the maximum term it offers on interest-only mortgages to 40 years.

From Tuesday April 9, it will increase the maximum term on interest-only mortgages to bring it in line with its capital and repayment deals, up from 25 years.

Under the shake-up, customers applying for an interest-only mortgage, who also intend to sell their property later as their way to repay the mortgage, must have at least £300,000 equity in the property. Previously this was £250,000.

The bank will also make other updates to its affordability calculations, due to changes coinciding with the new 2024-25 tax year.

Santander will take child benefit into account for those earning up to £60,000 following the increase to the high income child benefit charge threshold, as well as the reduction in national insurance contributions for PAYE (pay as you earn) and self-employed applicants, enabling people to borrow more.

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The best buy-to-let mortgages for landlords: Should they fix or risk a tracker?

Interest-Rates.Info - UK Mortgage & Property News - Birmingham Money - West Bromwich Money - Mortgage Brokers

Buy-to-let landlords are being hit by higher interest rates, higher costs and a less friendly tax regime.

Many have seen their costs spiral, meaning that landlords will have watched the recent falls in mortgage rates with just as much interest as homeowners and first-time buyers.

There are roughly 2 million buy-to-let properties that have a mortgage attached, according to the trade association for the banking and financial services sector, UK Finance.

An estimated 230,000 of these have fixed-rate mortgage deals that are due to end this year.

While the residential rates aimed at home buyers and homeowners have hogged the headlines, average buy-to-let rates were until recently heading downwards.

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Buy To Let costs breakdown shows how returns are falling

Interest-Rates.Info - UK Mortgage & Property News - Birmingham Money - West Bromwich Money - Mortgage Brokers

he total return of the average buy-to-let property has reduced by 6% over the last two years, driven by a sharp increase in mortgage costs and agency fees and a reduction in capital appreciation.

This comes despite rental income climbing by 19% on average over the same period.

Octane Capital analysed the cost of being a landlord, looking at the initial investment required when investing in a buy-to-let, as well as the ongoing costs associated with such an investment versus the total return expected in the current market. 

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Buy to Let bites back as landlords left languishing over punishing interest rate rises

Interest-Rates.Info - UK Mortgage & Property News - Birmingham Money - West Bromwich Money - Mortgage Brokers

he amount of money borrowed to fund buy to let property purchases plummeted by 56 percent at the end of last year.

Rising interest rates made it increasingly difficult for buy to let landlords to cover repayments on buy to let mortgages.

The net effect is that it was no longer seen as an easy option to build property wealth and earn a good income.

Many have been inspired by TV shows such as the BBC’s Homes Under the Hammer to buy properties cheap at auction, renovate them and then rent them out.

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Mortgage defaults expected to surge 22% over next year

Interest-Rates.Info - UK Mortgage & Property News - Birmingham Money - West Bromwich Money - Mortgage Brokers

Lenders are accounting for a 22 per cent increase in expected credit loss provision as mortgage defaults spike, analysis from Fuse has found.

The analysis, which looked at the most recent financial statements of 10 of the UK’s largest mortgage lenders, found lenders are accounting for ECL exceeding £760mn this year.

This is an increase on the £625mn in the previous year.

The research revealed that seven of the 10 lenders reported an increase of more than 10 per cent in their ECL provision and just one reported a reduction in ECL allowance. 

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Households in crisis: Mortgage brokers reveal how borrowers are coping with higher rates

Interest-Rates.Info - UK Mortgage & Property News - Birmingham Money - West Bromwich Money - Mortgage Brokers

Since mortgage rates began rising, many of the nine million mortgaged households in the UK and close to two million landlords have been faced with the prospect of much higher payments.

Before that, many had become accustomed to ultra-low interest rates for more than a decade.

In this six-part series, we look at how much more people are really paying when they take out a new mortgage, how households are coping and if a mortgage crisis is afoot.

Previously, we looked at how much more people are paying for new mortgages compared to the cheaper deals many are rolling off.

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