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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To double our mortgage at 36?

108 replies

EponymousEponine · 20/11/2025 17:12

We (DH and I, both 36) bought our 5 bed 2 bathroom home 7 years ago as a project for £267k. We've since done a lot of work, remortgaged and currently owe £221k, with 33 years remaining on our mortgage. The house is worth £400k and our current interest rate is quite high as we have had some financial struggles in the past which limited our lenders. We pay £1250/month. Aside from electrics & plumbing I've done the majority of the work myself.

Our home is great but has room for more improvement if it's to be our forever home. We have 3 DC (8 and under), two of whom may live at home longer than usual due to additional needs. We're located less than 10 mins from my Dad at the moment, and the same distance from DC's school (and also the high school theyre likely to go to). The area is OK, its not the nicest but our street is safe and its more affordable than where my Dad lives, hence why we could afford a good sized house for a decent price. But there is a ceiling on the value. My biggest issue is the small garden we have, which was the only compromise when we bought it.

Another house has caught my eye. Its another project- on a bigger scale than our current home, but its in a frankly amazing area where most properties are £800k+. It's currently listed for £525k but isn't selling - it would require a lot of work which may put a lot of people off, but the potential is huge. Its got such gorgeous original features and is double fronted which is my dream. It also comes with an acre of land, a mixture of a large garden, small wooded area and open field. DH and I viewed it and I fell in love, but the catch is that its 40 minutes away from where we are now and would be a similar length drive to my Dad & DC's schools.

I'm completely torn. In theory we could sell our house, put down a 10% deposit (ideally pay 450k-500k max), leaving us £100k for immediate works to get it liveable & we'd then either do the rest ourselves or refinance. It would take about £200k to get it completely done to a nice spec, but then it would easily be worth £1m+. Obviously we'd be saddling ourselves with £400k+ of debt at 36, but the repayments wouldn't be too much more than what we're paying now due to us being more likely to get a better interest rate now. And we'd end up with a beautiful home which would be more likely to rise in value over time due to its location (very rural, no neighbours, adjacent to coveted Yorkshire village). The outdoor space would give us the opportunity to have a mini smallholding with a couple of goats, ducks and some chickens - always a dream of mine (and DD would love this too)

DH earns £85k/yr (a fairly recent development due to career progression), I earn £22k/yr part time (which is needed so I can accommodate our 2 children with additional needs, 1 of which doesn't attend school full time). It feels like a heart vs head choice. Staying is the head option - if we stay here we'd probably spend £50k on an extension to give us a better configuration, additional bathroom, utility room, downstairs wc. But overall mortgage debt would be half so better chance of repaying it/retiring early etc. But my heart is telling me to go for the beautiful dream location which would provide better long term financial growth with short-medium term inconvenience due being 40min away.. DH is happy whatever I decide.

Help please! My late mum would be my sounding board and since she died I'm without someone to talk this over with. AIBU to move to the big project house? YABU = stay put, YANBU = move

OP posts:
berlinbaby2025 · 22/11/2025 21:52

I think you'd be crazy to upsize, in this horrible economy we're in, which isn't forecast to improve anytime soon. Essentially you'd both be relying on your husband's high wage. The unemployment rate in the UK is the highest it's been since 2016. You say he has good job security, but we're in the beginning of a new age in terms of the workplace landscape and if push comes to shove, his employer will make his role redundant f it can save money. Or could you potentially switch to a well paid full-time job and he works part-time doing something different to what he's doing now?

I am a first time buyer and have been watching the property market like a hawk for months. I wouldn't be as sure as you are that the property will increase in value in years to come to £1,000,000 (or £800k) even with a £200k renovation cost.

berlinbaby2025 · 22/11/2025 22:19

Forgot to mention that Reeves is rumoured to be doubling council tax payments for band G and H properties.

Landlubber2019 · 22/11/2025 22:22

I wouldnt in the current climate, husbands job was 100% secure till it wasn't. Thankfully we haven't extended beyond our financial responsibilities but the economic climate is not running favourably to take on unnecessary risk !

venusandmars · 22/11/2025 22:28

@EponymousEponine If I was your Mum...

I'd say 'Heidi' was a novel, that particular dream was fiction. Please Eponine, be real, about this real life decision. The dream of the goats sometimes just has to be a shared dream. Find another way for you and dc to fulfill that dream. A goat adoption, a goat holiday - be creative. Your goat dream may not be worth all this disruption.

If I was your Mum I'd say: "please do not think about making your dc travel 40 minutes to their school and their friends" (and I say this as someone who moved only 20 minutes away). That kind of distance will be harder and harder as the years go by and they are more distant from their friends.

If I was your Mum I'd say: "don't feel responsible for looking after your Dad. However, the further you move from him the longer you will have to travel to visit. And I can tell you that takes it's toll".

Chocja · 22/11/2025 22:58

Regardless of anything finance or renovation issues, I would be concerned that the commute for your dad and for the dc is too much. That is an awful lot of extra time spent driving and for the first year it might not be so bad as you will still be in love with the new house but next winter

GeorgeClooneyshouldhavemarriedme · 22/11/2025 23:06

Fantasy..goats, picking herbs from your kitchen garden, fun with paintbrushes as you lovingly renovate.

Reality..kids and you stuck in the car for hours every day, constant knackering slog ( and spending) to keep on top of house animals and land.
And then the garden floods.

Peridoteage · 22/11/2025 23:13

I think you are building in a lot of quite optimistic assumptions:

  • getting it cheaper than its on for
  • what your current house will sell for (prices are falling in many areas)
  • how much you can get the work done for (beware! The cost of tradesmen and materials has rocketed)
  • what it will eventually be worth

Re-do the maths, but this time, assume a more pessimistic (realistic) set of variables eg:

  • buying it for asking (don't forget stamp duty & move costs
  • selling your current house for 5-10% less
  • reno work costing 20-40% more (see above re trades & materials)
  • ultimate value being 10-20% lower (prices in rural areas are much more vulnerable to the market softening. A move to a city is usually a need, job wise, a move to a village is more likely a want).

Does it still make sense? Really?

Or are you dwelling on a bit of a pipe dream?

No way would i move 40 mins from kids schools.

crappycrapcrap · 22/11/2025 23:14

We doubled our mortgage four years ago and it’s been a disaster. DH sudden dreadful health issue has impacted his (self employed) work. I tried and failed a new work venture which set us back, having secondary school age children is more expensive than ever and general cost of living has crushed us.

Im hoping next year to finally finish work on house and sell to go mortgage free. We’re early forties and should have done this as soon as we had the chance the first time.

Only go for it OP if you’re financially sorted. We stretched for the dream and got a bit of a nightmare.

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