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    • 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
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    • Competition watchdog investigates developers over mis-selling claims
    • UK economy may need further stimulus says the Bank of England
    • Your guide to mortgage valuations
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    • 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
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    • Protection Enquiries
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  • Interested in interest only?

Interested in interest only?

Traditionally, the way of paying your mortgage loan – as with most other forms of repayments – was to pay a combination of the capital you borrowed and the interest accrued on it at the chosen rate from the lender. In the 1970s and 1980s, it became popular to simply repay the lender’s interest but take an investment plan designed to repay the capital at the end of the plan and maybe even provide a bit more cash.

It’s well documented that this didn’t always work out and many were, and still are, left with a shortfall, meaning that the funds in the investment plan didn’t clear the balance at the end of the mortgage term.

A more worrying trend started in the early 2000s with many cancelling their investments in the face of negative press, often without financial advice and some lenders even encouraging borrowers to take ‘interest only’ mortgages without any plan to repay the capital at all – except selling the property.

In recent years, regulation has largely stopped this practice however, there are many people from all these scenarios who have reached, or are approaching, the end of their term without a plan to repay the capital.

So what can they do? There are several options.

The first option is to sell up – most property would have increased in value significantly since the mortgage was taken – and downsize; this being the process of then buying a new cheaper / smaller property either outright with the sale proceeds or with a small manageable repayment mortgage. This works if you have children who have flown the nest and a smaller property will do or if you are happy to move to a less expensive area.

The second could be to make use of existing assets – other property or standalone investments / savings, even a pension lump sum – to repay the balance. Clearly, this may not be ideal unless you have lots of spare assets and / or cash. You could take out a new investment however, this would need to grow quickly and that could be very risky!

For those aged over 55 – and the timeframe means this is the case for many – the equity release or lifetime mortgage option is viable, though only if you have a minimum of 50% equity in your property. This enables you to refinance without making further repayments, if required, and extend the term until you are either ready to sell or for the rest of your life. You can even draw a little more, so long as you have the equity in the property however, it needs to be born in mind that interest is accumulated over the term at rates higher than current mortgage rates and this will be deducted as a lump sum upon sale of property or death.

Younger interest only borrowers, and potentially those older ones too, could simply switch their mortgage to a repayment one. This usually incurs a minimal administration fee from the lender (maybe £150 or so); it is a foolproof solution, so long as you can manage the likely increase in monthly outlay.

 

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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