EU tells accidental landlords they “can’t afford” cheaper mortgages.

A little-known piece of EU legislation could see so-called accidental landlords refused cheaper mortgages – because they can’t afford them!

The EU Mortgage Credit Directive, which comes into effect in the UK this month, is designed to prevent ‘risky’ mortgage lending and redefines landlord mortgages as “consumer lending”, making them subject to stricter lending criteria.

The directive introduces new mortgage affordability checks for lenders designed to ensure borrowers can afford their repayments – not just at their initial rate but also if rates were 6-7% higher.

The same rules will apply for those who are remortgaging too, meaning home-owners  switching mortgage deals to take advantage of lower rates could be told that they are unable to afford repayments cheaper than those they are currently making.

The move is likely to particularly effect so-called ‘accidental landlords’ – people who did not buy a property with the intention of renting it out, but who have been forced to do so by circumstances.

Research from Direct Line has shown that 62% of new buy-to-let mortgage applicants are unaware of the changes – a figure rising to 71% for accidental landlords.

From next year changes to mortgage tax relief will also mean landlords are no longer be able to claim tax relief on mortgage repayments. Instead of deducting mortgage interest repayments from their tax  bill they will instead receive a tax credit equivalent to 20% basic-rate tax on the amount – meaning that should interest rates rise some landlords could end up paying tax on losses.

Ajay Jagota is founder and Managing Director of North-East based sales and lettings firm KIS and creator of d_lighted, a rent-free insurance backed deposit-free renting solution which slashes the costs of tenants finding homes and landlords finding tenants.

Ajay last week appeared on BBC Breakfast and BBC Radio Five Live to discuss his concerns about the European Union.

He said: “It sounds completely ludicrous for lenders to deny people cheaper mortgages because they can’t afford them, and there’s a good reason for that – it is completely ludicrous.

“There is no question that this directive will create mortgage prisoners, people stuck overpaying on loans at a time when mortgage rates could be falling to their lowest ever levels.

“Literally anyone can end up an accidental landlord – through inheritance, through family breakdown or through having to relocate for work. Most of the time they have no ambition other than to cover their costs until their circumstances change and there’s a real risk that they might have to raise their rents just to cover those costs.

“Lenders should have the right to waive the affordability criteria when they’re remortgaging if there’s no increase in borrowing. If nothing else, this directive seems to fly in the face of EU’s commitment to a free market by denying people access to the full range of financial products available to them.”

Alex Evans

You May Also Enjoy

Rightmove logo
Breaking News

Highest ever price gap between first-time buyer and second-stepper home

Latest Rightmove data shows that the price gap between a typical first-time buyer home and a second-stepper home is at its highest ever, increasing cost pressures on those looking to trade up: The average asking price for a 3-4 bedroom, typical mid-market second-stepper home is 52% more than a 0-2 bedroom, typical first-time buyer home…
Read More
Estate Agent Talk

Mortgage Rates and Human Behaviour: Why Small Changes Create Big Reactions

By Sarah Thompson, Group Financial Services Director, Mortgage Scout Mortgage rates have returned to the headlines in recent weeks, with some lenders pushing products back above 5%. Renewed market volatility has been driven in part by global uncertainty, including the conflict in the Middle East and its impact on energy markets and investor confidence. Yet…
Read More
Breaking News

Nearly six in ten UK property purchases trigger AML red flags

Nearly six in ten UK property purchases now require further scrutiny under anti-money laundering (AML) rules, according to new data from client due diligence platform Thirdfort. Analysis of more than 415,000 completed Source of Funds (SoF) checks found that 57.7% of transactions contained at least one red flag, with an average of two flags per…
Read More
Breaking News

Vanishing act of sub-4% fixed rate mortgages

A cut to Bank of England Base Rate (BBR) looks increasingly unlikely, with the upheaval in mortgage re-pricing leading to a vanishing act of sub-4% fixed mortgages, according to Moneyfactscompare.co.uk analysis. Mortgage market analysis The pool of lenders offering a sub-4% fixed rate deal has taken a significant blow. All of the biggest banks, namely…
Read More
Estate Agent Talk

Government’s Home Buying and Selling Reform

Will the Government’s Home Buying and Selling Reform Consultation Increase or decrease the speed at which the market moves? Kevin Shaw, National Sales Managing Director, LRG The government’s consultation on Home Buying and Selling Reform is a step in the right direction. It recognises what every estate agent and conveyancer already knows: property sales take…
Read More
Letting Agent Talk

The Draft Leasehold and Commonhold Reform Bill

Content and clarification Comment from the Association of Leasehold Enfranchisement Practitioners (ALEP) By Shabnam Ali-Khan – Partner, Russell-Cooke Following the rushed Royal Assent of the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024, further controversy has arisen. In the King’s Speech on 17 July, the new Leasehold and Commonhold Reform Bill was announced, but the full details…
Read More