westf27
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posted on 12/3/10 at 07:57 PM |
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mortgages
Daughter needs a first time mortgage.Anyone done this very recently and found a super deal.Had a quick look at deposits required,loan to value and
interest rates...not encouraging.Come on you gotta help me here!!!!
555
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daniel mason
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posted on 12/3/10 at 08:10 PM |
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i was a first time buyer about 3 years ago now but got a good deal with a 20% deposit. 2 years fixed at 4.5% i think i got over 25 years! that was
with the abbey.
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morcus
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posted on 12/3/10 at 08:34 PM |
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Your gonna have a difficult time. I've been wanting to buy my first house for the last two years but noone will give you any money without big
deposits (Most wanted 40%)
In a White Room, With Black Curtains, By the Station.
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COREdevelopments
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posted on 12/3/10 at 09:23 PM |
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I am in the same boat. Me and the missus have got a good deposit and have had a mortage in principal, with the abbey but the house sale fell through
(it was a repo and someone outbid us at the very last minute!) There was a few choices availabe but the abbey came out tops at the time, no valuation
fee and cash back upon completion. Fixed for 2 years. Like said above you will need a good deposit to make it seem reasonable. Good luck and dont buy
a repo!!
Atb
Rob
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ashg
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posted on 12/3/10 at 09:25 PM |
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HSBC first time buyer. 10% deposit 5.99% interest fixed for two years.
quite a good interest rate for such a small deposit in the current climate.
Anything With Tits or Wheels Will cost you MONEY!!
Haynes Roadster (Finished)
Exocet (Finished & Sold)
New Project (Started)
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Paradoxia0
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posted on 12/3/10 at 10:33 PM |
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I got a cracking deal with HSBC for my first mortgage (a few years ago) but when my circumstances changed - the misses cleared off - HSBC
wouldn't even entertain talking to me...
Got my second mortage through the Abbey and they have been nothing but helpful and to be a fair faultless!
I know this doesn't answer the great deals question, but maybe helps with customer service?
Mark
There is no replacement for displacement...
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gazzarose
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posted on 12/3/10 at 11:35 PM |
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Me and my gf bought our first house a year ago (moved in exactly 1 year ago today), tried looking for mortgages ourselves, but in the end went to a
mortgage adviser recommended by a friend. They do it everyday and know whos got a good rate on any given day. Got a good rate, which changed a few
times as well as change of bank, while we were waiting for things to go through, then only signed up at the last minute. We were buying as the BOE
base rate was dropping so by waiting til last minute saved I think 2%. He charged us £50 (after being quote by another company £900 to sort the
mortgage out this seemed like a bargain) and in 2 yrs when our fixed rate is over, he'll sort out a remortgage for free. I can't remember
the details now, but it was 15% deposit of 95.5k, over 35 years was £440 a month. Bizzarly, if the base rate stays as it is, at the end of our
'introductory 2 year fixed rate deal thing' the monthly repayments will go down,lol.
Good luck with it all and I hope it goes smoother than ours. It about 4 months from viewing the house to getting the keys, load of ball ache stuff
about different surveys.
Gareth
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JoelP
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posted on 13/3/10 at 08:20 AM |
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I think a good broker, like a good accountant, pays for himself. Sadly, i think my old broker has retired!
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TigerB6 Paul
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posted on 13/3/10 at 10:15 AM |
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As above - find a good mortgage advisor and let them use their daily updated software and knowledge to find the best deal given the circumstances.
They get commission generally and so its no dearer than going direct to the provider.
PS i used to do mortgages myself and cant understand the people who wont use a broker to save them time and money. Seen too many people take the wrong
product because they were too tight (in their head) to pay a professional and cost themselves hundreds of pounds in extra interest for the privilege.
The best deal last week (or even yesterday) isnt the best for someone else - mortgages arent just about the lowest perceived interest rate.
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40inches
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posted on 13/3/10 at 10:44 AM |
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Go HERE
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