Financing your new homeBefore you can begin the hunt for a property to buy now that you are divorced and single again you need to assess what you can reasonably afford to borrow and pay back without bankrupting yourself.
As if getting a divorce were not enough to have bankrupted you, being on your own again means that you have only yourself to depend on to pay all the bills and it can be an alarming prospect if you have been used to having two salaries going into the bank. Not only will you have to take into account the actual asking price of any property you may be interested in and the other expenses involved in moving but also future running costs. If you have already sold a property which you previously owned jointly with your spouse then you will be in a stronger position than if you were a first time buyer trying to wiggle your toe onto the bottom rung of the housing ladder. It'a a tricky business so it's good to have all the information and advice you can get. Add it all up and you should be able to work out what you have left to pay the mortgage. The result may result in a panic attack as you contemplate your future as a divorced person, maybe with children to look after, living in a cardboard box on the side of the motorway but it is possible that with careful budgeting you will still be able to afford something albeit a tad more modest than your present des res. However, it will be somewhere to slob about in your trackie bottoms and a T-shirt eating baked beans straight out of the tin with no-one to criticise or raise a disdainful eyebrow. As for moving costs there are all the usual suspects such as estate agents’ fees, stamp duty, surveys and local authority searches, and the Home Information Pack , hiring a removal firm to transport your possessions to your new home (not forgetting the industrial sized packet of teabags and the gallons of milk needed to quench the thirst of those hard working chaps shunting your furniture around). And then, if all that were not enough you will probably want to do a certain degree of re-decorating when you move into your new home. If the previous owners have not left curtains or carpets you will need to budget for those too as well as other household necessities which you may need.
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Getting a mortgageYou have found somewhere you want to buy and think you can afford, but just how are you going to pay for it? Getting the dosh together to buy your life after divorce home can present a few headaches.. Aside from holding up the cashier at your bank and demanding that they hand over the money in used fivers you are Most lenders will loan up to 75% of the value but gone are the days when it was possible to borrow up to 90% or even 95% of the value of the property. The recent near collapse of the credit market has made lenders not only lend less as a percentage of the value of the property but also tighten their lending criteria. Remember that if you do not keep up payments on your mortgage or other loan secured upon your home it may be repossessed. Comment on this article |
MortgagesThe biggest financial commitment most of us will make in our lives is the mortgage on our property. If you are divorced and looking for a new home then finding the right mortgage is esssential. You can change your lender without moving home in order to get a better deal – this is known as re-mortgaging. It is also the best and cheapest way to borrow a large sum of money in the long term. A repayment mortgage is one where monthly repayments are made for an agreed period until the loan and any interest due is paid back. Remember that if you do not keep up payments on your mortgage or other loan secured upon your home it may be repossessed. Comment on this article |