Do You Have to Have
a Mortgage to Buy a Home?
Buying a house is
almost certainly the most expensive purchase you will ever have to
make. Finding or saving the funds to buy your first home and get
your foot on to the property ladder used to be almost impossible
without taking out a mortgage to lend you the required funds.
Although most people
still don’t have access to the amount of cash you would need to buy
a home, alternate options to the mortgage are starting to be
explored. With the increased use of the internet to search for your
new home, and the increased involvement of the buyer and seller of
the house, direct communication between the two parties has never
been better.
Buyers and sellers
are now communicating together to see if they can reach a compromise
for the exchange for the house which doesn’t always include
financial payment. These deals are becoming increasingly creative
and can accommodate a whole host of requirements for either or both
parties.
The most widely used
alternative to the traditional mortgage is that of the seller
mortgage. Most buyers, particularly first time buyers, require a
substantial down payment towards the purchase of their new home.
This is usually a percentage of the overall price and is 10% as
standard. The cost of houses in the UK has risen hugely over the
past decade and so this can be as much as £18,000 in some areas of
the country for a small two bedroomed terraced house. Given that
many buyers have to rent their current home, savings are not always
easy to come by. Should they wish to buy a house from someone who
has no outstanding mortgage to pay a seller mortgage agreement is a
possibility.
The seller mortgage
involves the original owner remortgaging the property and then
setting up an amortized loan for the new buyer. This is a
complicated loan but has been made much easier lately as it can be
set up online and does not necessarily need an experienced and
expensive accountant to work out the details.

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