Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Get a rough idea of the timescale you're looking at. A typical timeline for a purchase in England, Wales and Northern Ireland is below. Be mindful though that timescales vary depending on the buyer's and seller's circumstances, plus conveyancing problems can arise and add delays. Six weeks to eight months.

    • Buying Fees

      Where you do pay a fee, it can be anything from a fixed fee...

  2. The maximum discount available to Housing Executive or housing association tenants applying to buy their home is £24,000. Your discount will be 20% if you’ve lived in the property for five years. You’ll get an extra 2% discount for every extra year, up to a maximum discount of 60% of the valuation or £24,000.

    • Key information
    • What is Help to Buy?
    • Help to Buy overview
    • How does it work?
    • Who can take part in the scheme?
    • What does the Help to Buy Agent do?
    • How to buy a Help to Buy home
    • How long does the process take?

    Amount of loan

    The maximum you can borrow from Help to Buy in England is £120,000 and up to £240,000 for London. There is no minimum amount.

    Buyer deposit required

    Buyers must provide a deposit of a minimum of 5% of the full purchase price of the home bought under this scheme

    Frequency, number and amount of repayments

    After five years you will be required to pay an interest fee of 1.75% of the amount of your Help to Buy shared equity loan at the time you purchased your property, rising each year after that by the increase (if any) in the Retail Prices Index (RPI) plus 1%. More details are on page 18. The loan itself is repayable after 25 years or on the sale of the property if earlier

    Help to Buy is equity loan assistance to home buyers from Homes England[footnote 1].

    Help to Buy makes new build homes available to all home buyers (not just first time buyers) who wish to buy a new home, but may be constrained in doing so – for example as a result of deposit requirements – but who could otherwise be expected to sustain a mortgage.

    Up to a maximum of 20% in England and up to 40% in London[footnote 2] , of the purchase price is available to the buyer through an equity loan funded by the Government through Homes England.

    Help to Buy is available in England from house builders registered to offer the scheme. Help to Buy has been available since 2013. In November 2015, Government announced an extension of the initiative up to 2021 (it may close earlier if all of the funding is taken up before 2021).

    This guide provides an overview of the product. If you’d like to know more, or if you want to apply, please contact your Help to Buy agent www.helptobuy.gov.uk.

    Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on a mortgage or any other debt secured on it.

    With Help to Buy, the buyer (‘you’) buys a new home on a new build development with assistance from Homes England in the form of an equity loan.

    For Help to Buy in England, not London, you must take out a first mortgage (with a qualifying lending institution e.g. a bank or building society) for at least 25% of the value of the property you wish to purchase. This mortgage, together with any cash contribution from you, must be a minimum of 80% of the full purchase price. The maximum full purchase price is £600,000.

    For London Help to Buy 40% equity loan assistance, your first mortgage must be at least 25% of the value of the property you wish to purchase. The mortgage, together with the cash contribution from you, must be a minimum of 60% of the purchase price. The maximum full purchase price is £600,000.

    Your cash deposit contribution must always be a minimum of 5% of the full purchase price.

    Homes England will provide an equity loan to fund the balance needed to make up the full purchase price of your home, up to a maximum of 20% (40% maximum for London Help to Buy) of the full purchase price.

    The equity loan must be repaid after 25 years, or earlier if you sell your home. You must repay the same percentage of the proceeds of the sale to Homes England as the initial equity loan (i.e. if you received an equity loan for 20% of the purchase price of your home, you must repay 20% of the proceeds of the future sale).

    Help to Buy enables buyers to purchase a new property, funded by a mortgage and with help from Homes England.

    This enables you to take out a mortgage on which you make repayments in the normal way. Your mortgage lender will require that you contribute a deposit (minimum 5% of the full purchase price). Your mortgage and deposit must cover a combined minimum of 80% of the total purchase price (or 60% of total purchase price in London). The rest of the purchase price will be paid for with an equity loan from Homes England.

    As a result of providing this assistance, Homes England has an entitlement to a share of the future sale proceeds equal to the percentage contribution required to assist your purchase. Examples of this are shown below.

    For the first five years of Help to Buy home ownership you will pay an initial monthly management fee of £1. This continues until the loan is repaid. After five years, the equity loan will be subject to an additional interest fee (collected from you on behalf of Homes England by Homes England’s Mortgage Administrator) of 1.75% per annum on the outstanding amount of the equity loan. From the fifth anniversary of the loan this fee will increase each year by the increase (if any) in RPI plus 1%.

    The management fee and interest fees are not capital repayments to your Homes England equity loan – they do not reduce the amount owing.

    When you sell your Help to Buy home (unless you have chosen to repay your equity loan earlier), you must repay the Help to Buy assistance from a share of the sale proceeds. So, if Homes England assisted your purchase with a 20% contribution, your repayment will be 20% of the total market value when it is sold.

    It is open to all buyers seeking a new build home.

    Help to Buy buyers outside London must be able to fund up to 80% of their selected property through a conventional mortgage and deposit. London Help to Buy buyers must be able to fund 60% of the property through a conventional mortgage and deposit.

    Buyers must always provide a 5% cash deposit contribution (5% of the full purchase price).

    Buyers must take out a first charge mortgage with a qualifying lender.

    The maximum purchase price is £600,000.

    The Local Help to Buy Agent (see below) will carry out an assessment of an application by a potential Help to Buy buyer to ensure that they are in a position to afford a conventional mortgage for their proposed purchase. This protects tax payers’ investment in the Help to Buy home. Buyers cannot use the scheme if they require a main mortgage more than 4.5 times their household income.

    The Local Help to Buy Agents work on behalf of Homes England to signpost potential buyers towards Help to Buy schemes in their area and will carry out a sustainability check on applicants. Details of the policy the agents follow can be found on our guidance page and is updated from time to time.

    They will also guide you through the process of buying your Help to Buy home and issue the approvals to your solicitor and the house builder to purchase the home through the Help to Buy scheme.

    The role of the Local Help to Buy Agent is to:

    •hold information about Help to Buy schemes for prospective buyers

    •assess long term sustainability and eligibility

    •give approval to a Help to Buy buyer’s solicitor/conveyancer to proceed with a purchase

    Stage 1: Application

    Contact house builders, visit schemes of registered house builders and identify your potential Help to Buy property. Its recommended that you see an Independent Financial Advisor (IFA) to gain confirmation of your financial status. The Local Help to Buy Agent and house builders will be able to suggest some IFAs for you to try. You must ensure you have funds to pay: a reservation fee if required (maximum £500) a deposit on exchange of contracts of at least 5% of the full purchase price (some main mortgage lenders may require higher deposits) other fees on completion (e.g. stamp duty, legal fees, main mortgage fees). You complete a Help to Buy “Property Information Form” (available from the house builder). You must complete this with details of your proposed purchase, your proposed main mortgage, deposit and including your household income. The Property Information Form also confirms your agreement to the funds due under the Help to Buy mortgage being paid directly to the house builder. You must also reserve the home. You will usually be expected to pay a reservation fee to the house builder. The signed Property Information Form and a copy of the builder’s reservation form must be sent to the Local Help to Buy Agent.

    Stage 2: Authority to Proceed

    Your Local Help to Buy Agent checks you can afford your main mortgage and ensures you have signed the declaration that the Help to Buy home will be your only residence. This is to protect tax payers’ investment in the Help to Buy equity loan. If affordable, you will receive an “Authority to Proceed” from your Local Help to Buy Agent within four working days of the house builder submitting your fully completed Property Information Form and reservation form to the Local Help to Buy Agent. This process may be delayed if you do not fully complete your Property Information Form. You instruct a solicitor to act for you and tell your IFA so that a full mortgage application can be submitted. The ‘Authority to Proceed’ will be accompanied by instructions to you and your solicitor/conveyancer. This pack will include legal documents that will be explained to you by your solicitor/conveyancer. You should only submit your main mortgage application once you have the “Authority to Proceed” from the Local Help to Buy Agent.

    Stage 3: Mortgage offer and exchange of contracts

    Your solicitor/conveyancer will advise you and ensure you sign the sale contract and the Help to Buy equity loan. Your solicitor/ conveyance will explain the legal implications of the equity loan, that the Help to Buy home must be your only residence and the consequences of a fraudulent application (see below). Your solicitor/conveyancer checks that your mortgage offer, property price and available funds are consistent with the Authority to Proceed, and requests permission to exchange contracts from the Local Help to Buy Agent. Your Local Help to Buy Agent issues approval to your solicitor/conveyancer and contracts are exchanged. You will have paid a deposit if required and are now legally contracted to complete the purchase by an agreed date.

    Once you find a property you want to buy, you need to reserve it and submit a duly completed ‘Property Information Form’ to your Local Help to Buy Agent.

    Your Local Help to Buy Agent will seek to assess your affordability (from a fully completed Property Information Form) within four working days and will issue an Authority to Proceed.

    Your Local Help to Buy Agent’s ‘Authority to Proceed’ is valid for three months – the time limit for exchange of contracts. Typically, most house builders will be seeking buyers to exchange contracts within one month of making a reservation. You must legally complete on your purchase within six months of exchanging contracts.

    You are responsible for securing your mortgage and appointing your solicitor/conveyancer, although your Local Help to Buy Agent and house builders will be able to suggest some options.

  3. Sep 6, 2019 · 1. Introduction. Buying a home is often the largest purchase you will make in your lifetime. It is really important you have the right information, at the right time, to ensure you make informed ...

  4. Feb 2, 2024 · 1. Save a mortgage deposit. You’ll usually need to save a deposit of at least 5% of the price of the property you want to buy. For example, if you wanted to buy a house worth £200,000 with a 95% mortgage, you would put down £10,000 of your own money and borrow the remaining £190,000.

  5. Sep 9, 2024 · Key takeaways. Once you’ve found a home you love, it normally takes six to 12 weeks to buy it – but it can take up to six months. The longest part of the process is likely to be the search for 'the one'. The conveyancing part is the next longest part, which can take up to three months. It can seem like the process of buying a home is ...

  6. People also ask

  7. Overview. Buying a home takes about 5 months on average. The process can take longer if you’re part of a chain of buyers and sellers. If you’re also selling a home, read the guide to selling ...

  1. People also search for