A question on equity release next!
If I bought my house for £100K years ago and my mortgage is £50K ... if the value is now £200K that means I've 'made' £100K. Now if I release equity of £50K on the value of my house ... what is my outstanding mortgage? Is it still £50K, or is it now £100K?
I think it'll be £100K otherwise I could just use that £50K and pay off the mortgage ... and everyone would be doing it. An estate agent I was talking to today, seemed to imply that I could take the £50K without affecting the mortgage.
I think her logic was that I bought the house for £100K but it's now worth £200K, since it's my house, it's my money and not the banks ... therefor I wouldn't have to pay them anything for taking 'my money'. I think the only way you can get hold of that money is by selling up.
Ive got a repayment mortgage and definately yes you would owe £100k but you are moving anyway???? May have a look sometime at offset though but I am always cautious as at least with repayment I see year on year it going down.
You dont need to worry bout work...
I'll keep you busy :twisted:
If it's like that so am I moving down your way!!!
:twisted:
lol, so i should expect alot of new neighbours shortly then?
The only real way of " Releasing Equity " is to sell up the house and buy a tent.
I like the theory put forward by one of the BBC Business writers.
In a nutshell it was something like this: He said he'd be more than happy for the price of his £150,000 house to fall to 25p. He rationalised it by explaining that he would still be paying the same amount each month on the mortgage, but with all the other houses being so cheap, he could buy something akin to Buck House by adding about £10 to his current debt.
Sounds simple doesn't it. :shock:
He's quite right too. This was the point I was making earlier, the lower the average value, the smaller the jump up to a more expensive house.
To use the analogy I used before, if you bought a house for £50K (with a £50K mortgage) and want to move to a house twice as expensive, then if the value of your house drops to 25p then the house that is twice as expensive will be worth 50p.
Ok, so you've got a £50K mortgage on a 50p house, but the reality is that it has cost you 25p to move, versus £150K to make the same move if house prices had tripled instead.