With your Right To Buy Mortgage you pay no deposit.

Right To Buy can give you extra cash.

Council Right to Buy Mortgages, what they are, how and where to get one The 1981 Housing Act allows council tenants to buy the property they live in from the local authority. Most Council Tenants have "the Right To Buy" their home. The right to buy means you can buy your home from a local authority, a non-charitable housing association or a housing action trust. Usually a "right to buy" mortgage will cost less than on the open market because as a tenant you can obtain a discount on the loan. Under the right-to-buy schemecouncil tenants are entitled to a 32% discount on the value of their house after they have lived in it for two years, followed by a further 1% deduction for each additional year, up to a maximum of 60%. For flats the available discount rises to 70%.

 

 

 

 

Oakhill Mortgage Services Limited

Use Your Right To Buy

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Right To Buy

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Mortgage Problems?
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To qualify for a Right to buy Mortgage Loan you must: 1. Be the legal tenant of the property you wish to purchase. 2. Have been a tenant of this Council or another "right to buy" landlord for at least two years. You may be entitled to a discount off the purchase price of your home. The amount of discount depends on how long you have been tenant in the Council House or other "right to buy" landlord, and the type of dwelling you are living in. 1. For Houses: The discount after two years is 32% with an additional 1% for everextra year up to a maximum of 60%. 2. Flats: The discount after two years is 44% with an additional 2% for every extra year up to a maximum of 70%. Various mortgage schemes are available which allow capital raising for home improvements. Monthly mortgage payments are often lower than rental costs.