My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Join the discussion and meet other Mumsnetters on our free online chat forum.

Chat

How can anyone afford to get a mortgage when banks supposedly only loan out x3.5 of your yearly salary?

103 replies

TwixBix1 · 25/02/2019 21:59

Most people when talking about buying a house always complain about how difficult and long it was to save up enough for the deposit (which is 5% minimum but can be more)..

Yet to me, it seems the deposit isn't too bad and it's finding a mortgage that'll cover the rest which is impossibe.

Say I wanted to buy a £250k flat/house and I pay 20k deposit towards it. That means the mortgage should cover 230k.. if banks only give mortgages up to x3.5 of your salary, surely I''d need to be earning at least £65,000 to get a mortgage for a measly 250k flat or house?

If that's the case, I feel like very few people would be homeowners..

Aside from having a joint mortgage, what's a way to get around this?

OP posts:
Report
Mustbetimeforachange · 25/02/2019 22:01

Save up for longer? It's tough.

Report
flumpybear · 25/02/2019 22:04

Can you get a guarantor for your mortgage? You could borrow more but check your affordability

Report
Nnnnnineteen · 25/02/2019 22:05

Agree. I have a great deposit, but a mortgage only works as long as I want to buy a property 200 miles from friends, family and work...

Report
BMW6 · 25/02/2019 22:05

Much bigger deposit or much cheaper property. Our 2 bed terrace cost £118k in 2009, current value £180k, Hampshire.

Report
YeOldeTrout · 25/02/2019 22:07

DS is looking to buy on a £20k salary. He has found properties as low as £80k. He is planning a £30-£40k deposit.

I know it's impossible to find property that cheap in some cities but not impossible everywhere.

Report
ChesterGreySideboard · 25/02/2019 22:07

That’s the problem.

Buy a cheaper house or flat if you don’t have a working partner. Once you are on the first rung of the ladder you can move up.

Report
titchy · 25/02/2019 22:08

Buy with someone else. I don't think many single people have ever been able to buy their own home.

Report
FrostedSnowdrops · 25/02/2019 22:08

I couldn't have bought much as a single person. My broker said 4.5 times income though.

Report
blue25 · 25/02/2019 22:09

I would say most people either have parental help towards their deposit or they're moving with a lot of equity. We built up over 200k equity before we moved to our second house. Also lots of people here in the SE are earning 50k+ and in double income households.

Report
x2boys · 25/02/2019 22:09

Well you could but a small house got about £70-80,000near me

Report
ReaganSomerset · 25/02/2019 22:09

I think you need two people, both with decent jobs. Or you get a cheaper house initially, overpay on the mortgage, build up your equity and then if you manage to pay off most of it you will only need a small mortgage on your bigger house because you have so much capital.

Report
Caticorn · 25/02/2019 22:10

A lot depends on where you live. £250k is not 'measly' around here!
Lots of people buy as a couple, so £65k salary between you is more achievable.

Report
harrypotterfan1604 · 25/02/2019 22:10

You have to find a property that’s within your allows mortgage. I bought a house in 2016 for £79k using a £6k deposit . It’s a 2 bed semi with a large garden and a drive for two cars. I don’t intend on living here forever but it for me on the property ladder and is a nice house it’s just not quite big enough. House is worth at least £110k now too so will make on it too

Report
hidinginthenightgarden · 25/02/2019 22:10

I often wonder how people my age have got houses bigger than ours in the same area. Our 3 bed terrace is 200k, the 4 bed detached opposite is owned by a couple a similar age. We got our property because a deceased relative left 25% of our house value to DH. I cannot imagine that in their late 20’s they are earning enough to have a mortgage for £380k! My guess is their story is similar to ours in that some help from family was available.

Report
Violetroselily · 25/02/2019 22:13

I've been looking at mortgage calcs alot lately and most lenders seem willing to lend me at least 4.5x my salary

Report
southnownorth · 25/02/2019 22:17

250k would get you a fantastic detached house round these parts.

Doesn't it go on affordability now? we need to remortgage soon but I was worrying about it as our outgoings are quite high.

Report
GregoryPeckingDuck · 25/02/2019 22:19

We’ve had this problem. In the end property prices grew so much in our area that mortgage repayments would be more than rent so we decided to wait for the next property slump.

Report
thecatsthecats · 25/02/2019 22:22

Yes - historically an absolutely miniscule proportion of the global population have owned their own home as a single adult. Living alone as a single adult is only a recent "boom" population.

Report
Chlo1674 · 25/02/2019 22:24

We bought a small starter home to get onto the ladder. We didn’t have a deposit but we bought a new build and the house build company was offering to pay the deposit as part of a deal. We found out about this through an independent mortgage broker. We fixed on a very low rate mortgage and paid off additional lump sums whenever we had some spare savings (savings rates weren’t very attractive at the time) to pay the mortgage down. By the time we were ready to buy a bigger house our first home which we had lived in for 12 years had increased in value to give us even more equity. I also know a family who are taking on a lodger to help with the mortgage payments but I wouldn’t feel comfortable with that at all

Report
Chlo1674 · 25/02/2019 22:24

There’s also help to buy on new builds.

Report
yellowcoat · 25/02/2019 22:26

You do have to buy as a couple, unfortunately if you will never be able to do that it is difficult.

Report
BackforGood · 25/02/2019 22:30
  1. Most people in the country buy properties that cost a lot less than £250K for a flat
  2. There are people that earn huge salaries
  3. Many people are given, or inherit money so aren't borrowing it all
  4. People buy with other people
Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

DisgraceToTheYChromosome · 25/02/2019 22:31

We bought our first house for £29995 in 1992, and sold it for £5 more seven years later. Half a mile away, the same house was making £45k. But after the second murder within 100 yards in the same year...

We bought our previous one for £48k on a good estate in a nice village, but it was in shit order. We still hadn't finished it in 20 years, owing to various circs. It went for £156k, and if we'd been FTBs, we could have only just managed.

Report
MissPhonic · 25/02/2019 22:32

"I bought a house in 2016 for £79k using a £6k deposit "

That's just not realistic in most areas. Flats where we live are £130,000+ for a poky 1 bed flat, on the edge of a city, terrible transport links into said city and in a pretty shitty area. 79K here wouldn't even get you a houseboat. (Not London BTW)

Report
CrispbuttyNo1 · 25/02/2019 22:35

Part rent / part buy schemes or help to buy are perfect for single people or couples on lower incomes .

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.