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    • Can we expect sub 1% mortgagee deals?
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    • Help to Debt (HTD) – the importance of good advice when it comes to making borrowing decisions
    • Bank of England January 2020 base rate meeting
    • Lender Dual pricing: what it means to the mortgage seeker
    • Direct rates offered through lender portals can be costly?
    • Bank of England cuts the base rate to almost zero
    • Buying, selling and moving home during the pandemic
    • Tightening credit conditions in the mortgage market
    • One in seven takes mortgage payment holiday
    • The property market reopens for business
    • Lenders reintroduce 90% mortgage deals
    • Turbulent times for lenders
    • Easing out of lockdown
    • First-time buyer demand surges but options are limited
    • Stamp duty scrapped on homes under 500k
    • Competition watchdog investigates developers over mis-selling claims
    • UK economy may need further stimulus says the Bank of England
    • Your guide to mortgage valuations
    • Your guide to mortgage surveys
    • A quick guide to interest rates
    • A quick guide to inflation
    • The state of the housing market at the end Of 2020
    • What to look for in the 2021 property market
    • Price caps revealed for Help To Buy Scheme
    • Are 95% mortgages coming back?
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  • Mortgages
    • Introduction
    • 1st Time Buyers Mortgage Guide
    • 1st Time Buyer & Help to Buy
    • What is a Buy to Let Mortgage?
    • Buy to Let Mortgage Advice
    • Flexible Mortgages
    • Interest Only
    • Remortgaging
    • Repayment
  • Protection
    • Introduction
    • Do I need Income Protection Insurance?
    • Income Protection Advice
    • Why do you need Life or Critical Illness Insurance?
    • Critical Illness & Serious Illness Cover
    • ASU / Redundancy
  • Life Insurance
    • Introduction
    • Term Insurance Policies
    • Endowment Policies
    • Family Income Benefit
    • Guaranteed 50 Plus Life Cover
    • Whole of Life
  • Conveyancing & Solicitors
  • Surveys and Valuations
  • General Insurance
    • Introduction
    • Buildings & Contents Insurance
    • Compare & Buy Online Now!
    • Landlord Cover
    • Rent Guarantee
    • Home Buyers' Protection
    • Home Emergency Cover
    • Commercial Insurance
    • Professional Indemnity
    • Public & Employers' Liability Insurance
  • Will Writing & Estate Planning
  • Other Loans & Services
  • Articles
    • Bank of England Rate Rise
    • Fee Free Mortgage Advice
    • Negotiating the best price for your new home
    • Freehold versus Leasehold
    • Why you need advice on mortgages
    • Ten terms first time buyers will want to know
    • Buying process and dealing with estate agents
    • Selling property and marketing options
    • Help to Buy or not Help to Buy: that is the question
    • New home or pre-loved?
    • Interested in interest only?
    • Are lifetime mortgages on the rise?
    • General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
    • Solicitors and conveyancers
    • Joint Borrower Sole Proprietor Mortgages
    • The 3% stamp duty
    • First-time buyer stamp duty relief
    • Offset mortgages: how they work and who they work for
    • Self-employed mortgages versus mortgages for those employed by others
    • Mortgages: debts versus deposits
    • House prices increase swiftest in North West compared to rest of UK
    • Transfer of Equity
    • 10 Pitfall Mortgages
    • Remortgages versus product transfers
    • Limited Company Buy-to-Let Mortgages
    • Retirement Interest Only (RIO) mortgages and the new residential option between normal Interest Only and Equity Release
    • 2019 and our rate of interest predictions
    • Brexit and the property market 2019
    • Potential benefits of using a broker
    • The mortgage market: lenders and their existing clients
    • Mortgages and Relationships
    • Robo Advice: is it right for you?
    • Cheaper rates versus cheaper fees
    • Why online mortgage comparisons can be so vastly different
    • Affordability Calculators
    • Cashback Mortgages
    • Government Rent a Room Scheme
    • Government Marriage Allowance
    • The property market continues to move; and the North West is looking good
    • England letting fees banned and how this may affect you
    • Top credit file definitions
    • Understanding your credit rating
    • BTL, LTB, HMO & holiday let terms explained
    • Offset mortgages: term and payment reduction options
    • November 2019 Bank of England base rate
    • The general election candidates for the Chorley Constituency
    • 2019 year-end mortgage lending market
    • 2019 year-end house prices
    • Can we expect sub 1% mortgagee deals?
    • How is Brexit likely to affect 2020 mortgages and house prices?
    • Interest rates in the UK, Europe and beyond
    • How the Great British Pound is faring against Euro and US Dollar
    • Help to Debt (HTD) – the importance of good advice when it comes to making borrowing decisions
    • Bank of England January 2020 base rate meeting
    • Lender Dual pricing: what it means to the mortgage seeker
    • Direct rates offered through lender portals can be costly?
    • Bank of England cuts the base rate to almost zero
    • Buying, selling and moving home during the pandemic
    • Tightening credit conditions in the mortgage market
    • One in seven takes mortgage payment holiday
    • The property market reopens for business
    • Lenders reintroduce 90% mortgage deals
    • Turbulent times for lenders
    • Easing out of lockdown
    • First-time buyer demand surges but options are limited
    • Stamp duty scrapped on homes under 500k
    • Competition watchdog investigates developers over mis-selling claims
    • UK economy may need further stimulus says the Bank of England
    • Your guide to mortgage valuations
    • Your guide to mortgage surveys
    • A quick guide to interest rates
    • A quick guide to inflation
    • The state of the housing market at the end Of 2020
    • What to look for in the 2021 property market
    • Price caps revealed for Help To Buy Scheme
    • Are 95% mortgages coming back?
  • Enquiry Forms
    • Mortgage Enquiries
    • Protection Enquiries
    • General Enquiries
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  • Our Associates
  • Home
  • Mortgages: debts versus deposits

Mortgages: debts versus deposits

You certainly need some money behind you to get on the property ladder in the 21st century and how much depends on which kind of scheme, property or even lender you use, not to mention the area you intend to buy in.

How do debts and savings work together when it comes to securing a mortgage?

Many of us have debt and a significant amount of us have both debts and savings. Any financial adviser worth their salt would usually suggest using your savings to clear debt as you invariably pay a higher interest rate on your debts than you receive on your savings, so that’s basic financial sense. However there can be a paradox when it comes to applying for a mortgage.

As we’ve already touched on, you need a certain amount of cash to use as a deposit for your purchase and to pay moving costs like stamp duty and legal fees. The larger the deposit (in 5% gradients), the lower the interest rate offered by the lender, so putting in the biggest deposit you can could reduce your monthly mortgage repayments significantly.

If you have debt, the flipside of this is that since the Mortgage Market Review was implemented in the UK in April 2014, banks and building societies have largely ditched the simple ‘X times your salary’ calculation used for determining mortgage capacity in favour of ‘affordability-based lending’. This means a more complex set of criteria and calculations are combined to work out what maximum monthly repayment is affordable should rates rise by a certain amount for each individual application, be it sole or joint.

This is where there can be an issue if you have debts (or other regular monthly outgoings like childcare or maintenance payments). Essentially, if the debt has more than six months left to run at the time of application or is a rolling credit arrangement like a credit/store card or overdraft, then monthly repayments towards this can reduce the maximum borrowing amount offered by the mortgage lender.

So, the question is: should you pay off your debt with your savings before applying for a mortgage or not?

The answer is not simple; consideration also needs to be given to the fact that repaying debt improves your credit rating which also plays a part in the application process. Every case is different, of course, and many lenders view different types of debt differently, so as always bespoke advice is needed.

This becomes even more apparent when you consider how if you are borrowing well within your mortgage capacity, have debts but can reduce your interest rate by using more of your savings in the deposit amount then it may be prudent to do so. If you need to maximise your borrowing but have debts, then repaying them will help and if it leaves you short on deposit then maybe now is not the right time to commit.

Sounds confusing? There is good news…

The Euxton team deal with these issues daily; balancing what is right for clients, making carefully calculated judgements and advising on the course of action that is most suitable for each one. Why not give us a call today?

Company address: Euxton Mortgage Market, Hearle House, 5 East Terrace Business Park, Euxton Lane, Chorley, Lancashire, PR7 6TB
T: 01257208946 F: 01257208947 Email: info@euxtonmortgagemarket.co.uk

Euxton Mortgage Market are independent mortgage advisers covering Euxton and the surrounding areas, including: Leyland, Bamber Bridge, Farrington, Lostock Hall, Longton, Adlington, Charnock Richard, Croston and Rivington.

Adrian John Wood, trading as Euxton Mortgage Market, is an appointed representative of HL Partnership Limited, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority.

*Some of these products are not regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority.

Adrian John Wood is entered on the Financial Services Register (www.fca.org.uk/register) under reference 682490.

H L Partnership Limited is entered on the Financial Services Register (www.fca.org.uk/register) under reference 303397.

The information contained in this website is subject to UK regulatory regime and is therefore intended for consumers based in the UK.

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