Help for mortgage holders |
Gordon Brown has announced the Homeowners Mortgage Support Scheme. This new scheme will enable households that experience redundancy or other significant loss of income to defer a proportion of their interest payments for up to two years. Banks will have to participate in the scheme in order for the Government to guarantee the deferred interests payments. The 8 largest lenders covering 70% of the mortgage market – HBOS, Nationwide, Abbey, Lloyds TSB, Northern Rock, Barclays, RBS, HSBC – have agreed to support the new scheme.
The details of the scheme have not yet been finalised but it is thought that the scheme will be open to anybody with a mortgage of less than £400,000 and no more than £16,000 in savings. Applicants would have to provide evidence of genuine economic hardship and have had trouble meeting repayments for 3 months.
There are more than 10 million homeowners with mortgages of less than £400,000. It has been suggested that repossessions could hit 75,000 next year, rising from an estimated 45,000 this year.
The Chancellor, Alistair Darling, said:
“This is real help for homeowners at risk of repossession through no fault of their own. The scheme will give people who face a temporary fall in their income the confidence that they need to rearrange their finances so they can come through a difficult period without losing their home.”
Teresa Perchard at the Citizens Advice Bureau said:
“To ensure that borrowers are not saddled with unreasonable and excessive payments after the 2 years are up it will be vital that both parties explore all the options available during this period. More also needs to be done to help those on the margins of the mortgage market whose lenders have not signed up to this scheme.“