We asked the experts for the best deals on the market for those looking to get on the property ladder.
Melanie Bien, director of independent mortgage broker Private Finance
"If you don't mind a new-build home, a number of developers are offering incentives and mortgages at higher LTVs than you could normally achieve. Taylor Wimpey has teamed up with Melton Mowbray and Saffron building societies to offer a 95 per cent LTV deal fixed at 2 years from 5.49 to 5.99 per cent.
"But while that is not a bad rate for this level of borrowing, fixing for such a short time is risky in a volatile housing market in which interest rates look set to rise sooner rather than later.
"Bovis has linked up with Woolwich to offer 90 per cent LTV mortgages at competitive rates with an insurance policy paid for by the developer to protect the lender in case of default, while Barratt has teamed up with Hitachi Capital to offer parents a £50,000 loan to help their child with the deposit.
"More conventional schemes, which don't require you to buy a new-build home include Lloyds' Lend A Hand. The child puts down just a 5 per cent deposit while the parents commit the equivalent of 20 per cent of the purchase price in savings in a Lloyds account. The child then pays the sort of rate normally only accessible on a 75 per cent LTV deal, making it much more affordable."
David Hollingworth, London & Country
The Mortgage Works has launched some specific guarantor products – for example they have a 3 year fixed rate at 4.99% with a 1% fee to 85% LTV.
Any new innovations that lenders have tried to pull together to assist first time buyers will usually draw in some way on parental assets.
For example, the Lloyds Lend a Hand scheme offers up to 95% LTV to the child but on the condition that parents put an additional 20% in a separate savings.
The lender has a charge over the savings although this can be released at the end of the fixed rate bond period subject to the LTV improving adequately. The benefit of this is that the child can get a higher LTV and the parent retains the savings in their own name rather than having to gift them to the child. What it doesn’t get round is the need for a large amount of cash to put into the transaction.
A solution from National Counties BS looks to provide an alternative working on similar lines but avoiding the need for substantial cash sums by using spare equity in the parental home as additional security.
The Family First Guarantor mortgage offers a fixed rate at 4.99% until 30/11/13 up to 95% LTV (with additional security) with a £495 fee. Bath BS also offers a similar idea with its Parental Assisted Mortgage.
Developers keen to shift their stock have been particularly keen to look at new options. Barratt recently launched an unsecured loan offering for parents looking to provide a deposit to their children. Taylor Wimpey has today been reported to be hooking up with some local building societies to offer 95% mortgages on specific developments.
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