No there is other ways mentioned but hey life's a gamble and fun is expensive
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my sister done the same also with Aviva,on the same conditions as yours,this was on a house worth £425000 reason being she has lived in the house since she got married and has her granddaughter living with her and did not want to downsize,so as nether her or my BIL had private pension to fall back on,only state pension my sister would have to have kept working forever,my BIL is ill and unable to work so she decided to release 25% of the value of the house so she could retire without having money worries.WE took out ER 4 years ago, after lots of research and independent legal advice, no regrets so far, we did it through Aviva themselves, all went very smoothly, they will only lend you up to 25% of your property value, and you will never have to repay more than the value of your property.
We have no dependants and could not realistically downsize comfortably from a 2 bedroom bungalow, we will only have to repay the mortgage if we decide to sell the property, or are moved into a nursing home.
Assuming I keel over first, my O/H will be able to live here by by choice as long as she exists.
After we have both expired, our solicitor will sell the property and pay Aviva their due, the rest of any estate we have left to Norfolk Wildlife Trust of which we are keen members.
We did not buy our M/H with the money but have had some fabulously memorable holidays we could not have afforded otherwise, and have made many improvements to our property, works for us so far.
go for it,you are a long time dead.Has anyone done Equity Release to get a bit extra money to make retirement a bit easy. Never had a chance to save much or get a private pension so thinking of going along with equity release. Morgage paid kids up and they are not interested in us leaving anything for them when were gone our parents never left us nowt and are kids think the same use the money in the house and enjoy what time you have left you only live once etc. fun!!! fun!!! fun!!!
The difference being that you will have all the proceeds from the sale in your bank account rather than in the hands of the equity release company... Sounds like a plan!we are selling the house in 7 years time and renting something cheap somewhere,thats our plan.
Sounds good when you say it like that.....how about servicing this 25% loan, the ER company will be looking at something over and above the standard interest only mortgage rate. Add to this their management fees plus mandatory maintenance works needed to keep the ER companies investment in tip top order and you can see your 75% will soon be in free fall. Fools gold......my sister done the same also with Aviva,on the same conditions as yours,this was on a house worth £425000 reason being she has lived in the house since she got married and has her granddaughter living with her and did not want to downsize,so as nether her or my BIL had private pension to fall back on,only state pension my sister would have to have kept working forever,my BIL is ill and unable to work so she decided to release 25% of the value of the house so she could retire without having money worries.
there is no loan,you sell 25% of your house or equity to the company,their profit comes when the house is sold.Sounds good when you say it like that.....how about servicing this 25% loan, the ER company will be looking at something over and above the standard interest only mortgage rate. Add to this their management fees plus mandatory maintenance works needed to keep the ER companies investment in tip top order and you can see your 75% will soon be in free fall. Fools gold......
Hi, Yes 67 is very young these days, I agree with all the folk who advise against it but it is your decision and if you take advice best to go to your bank for advise because INDEPENDANT ( the first thing they look for is HOW much they make) advise has cost SWMBO and me many thousands ending up with the ombudsman who was as good as a chocolate fire guard. Good luckI am 67 is that young????? fun!!! fun!!! fun!!!
I'm no expert Chris but whatever funds the ER company have tied up in your sisters bank will have to be earning interest. If that interest is not being paid weekly then it will be building up against the property. The next year interest will be charged on the interest I'm afraid. Your sisters equity in the property will pay this when the house is sold.there is no loan,you sell 25% of your house or equity to the company,their profit comes when the house is sold.
the only problem i could see is if the house value was to drop to less than the value of the original 25%.
thats correct the interest will be paid when the house is sold,i believe that there is a fixed sum of interest,and when the house is sold the 25% of the value of the house should have increased and hopefully cover the fixed rate of interest,if it does not then then the full cost of the original 25%plus the interest has to be paid out of any money received for the house before any beneficiary's get their money.I'm no expert Chris but whatever funds the ER company have tied up in your sisters bank will have to be earning interest. If that interest is not being paid weekly then it will be building up against the property. The next year interest will be charged on the interest I'm afraid. Your sisters equity in the property will pay this when the house is sold.
I dont see any other way that it can work. Perhaps someone with more experience could put me right.
Sounds good but I can see much small print in the big picture.thats correct the interest will be paid when the house is sold,i believe that there is a fixed sum of interest,and when the house is sold the 25% of the value of the house should have increased and hopefully cover the fixed rate of interest,if it does not then then the full cost of the original 25%plus the interest has to be paid out of any money received for the house before any beneficiary's get their money.
my sister paid a solicitor to trawl over all document's,so should be safe.Sounds good but I can see much small print in the big picture.
Would this work?
An rough example
Say your house is worth 200K
Release £100k by taking an Offset Mortgage (any savings you have reduce the interest you pay on the mortgage)
Put the £100k into the bank - therefore on day 1 you pay NO interest on the mortgage
Draw down say £500 per month (or whatever you need)
After 12 months you have taken £6,000 - the interest you would pay on this (at 4% PA) would only be £240 for the year (or £20 per month)
I appreciate that you would earn no interest on the £100,000 savings but the cost of drawing down the money would be very low too, PLUS you've still got £100k equity in your home and have not had to move.
Also, if you had a 1-2-3 credit card, and used it for all your expenditure, you'd be earning money towards your mortgage interest repayments.
Does this work - or did I miss something?