Buy-to-let mortgages just got better
One lender has relaunched its range to give landlords a wider choice and better deals
The buy-to-let market has seen something of a resurgence in 2010 with new lenders launching, such as Precise Mortgages and Aldermore Mortgages, and stalwarts like Kensington Mortgages returning to new lending after temporarily shutting up shop.
The sector may have been bruised and battered during the last few years, but through it all a handful of lenders continued to lend and now dominate the market.
The Mortgage Works (TMW) is one of them, and this year it is really pushing forward in terms of product innovation. As the specialist intermediary lender of Nationwide, it offers a huge range of buy-to-let mortgages, and lends at the highest loan-to value ratio in the entire sector -- 80%.
New deals
Last week TMW launched a range of improvements to its products -- good news for landlords in a sector where it’s still hard for many to refinance their properties.
The key changes are:
- The introduction of a one-year tracker with no early repayment charges, offering landlords more flexibility, with the potential to repay early without penalty
- New 80% LTV products available with free standard valuation and free standard legal fees, plus a new flat arrangement fee product at this LTV tier
- The launch of lifetime variable mortgages with early repayment charges only until 31 May 2011
- The launch of a new five-year fixed rate mortgage at a rate of 5.79%, with 3.5% arrangement fee.
Great stuff, but are they any good?
More choice
The introduction of these new mortgage types is very welcome as it gives landlords more choice. Though, of course, not every deal will suit everyone.
The five-year fix at 5.79% is a great rate for a buy-to-let deal, for example, but it is only suitable for those who can suck up the whopping 3.5% fee. Of course, you only pay that fee once in five years, while you would have paid switching fees on two-year deals twice over the same period.
John Fitzsimons highlights three things to consider if you’re planning a buy-to-let investment
But for my money it is the changes to TMW’s 80% LTV range that is the best development here. Many landlords have been mortgage prisoners during the last few years with 25% equity needed in order to remortgage. If you didn’t have it, you were stuck on your lender’s SVR or reversionary rate -- with the risk that it could rise.
Earlier this year TMW began lending up to 80% of a property’s value to those with just 20% deposit or equity -- a major development. The fact it has extended and improved this range will appeal to many landlords.
Indeed, many buy-to-let borrowers who thought they were stuck on their deal and unable to switch may want to look again at the mortgages on offer, not just from TMW but across the market. There is a wide range of lenders now operating in buy-to-let, from high street lenders with just one product to specialists with a large range on offer.
Go for broker
The key thing to remember with buy-to-let is that a large proportion of the deals on offer are not available direct to the public. This is because many buy-to-let specialists are intermediary-only lenders -- you access their products through an authorised mortgage broker.
Related how-to guide
Become a buy-to-let landlord
How to pick the right property, get the right mortgage, take out the right insurance, choose the right letting agent and most importantly, unravel all that red tape!
See the guideOf course, many brokers are also buy-to-let specialists and have close relationships with lenders, so they know exactly where you are likely to be accepted for a deal.
Plus they will help you with the form filling and chase the lender for you, making the whole process smoother and potentially quicker.
If you want buy-to-let advice from a fully qualified mortgage broker, why not speak to a whole-of-market, fee free lovemoney.com broker. Call 0800 804 8045 or email mortgages@lovemoney.com for more help.
14 great buy-to-let fixed rates
|
LENDER |
TYPE OF DEAL |
RATE |
FEE |
MAX LTV |
|
2-year fix |
4.69% |
3.5% |
70% |
|
|
2-year fix |
4.89% |
£999 |
60% |
|
|
2-year fix |
5.20% |
2.5% |
70% |
|
|
3-year fix |
5.25% |
£1,495 |
75% |
|
|
3-year fix |
5.29% |
£1,495 |
75% |
|
|
2-year fix |
5.39% |
2.5% |
75% |
|
|
2-year fix |
5.40% |
2.5% |
75% |
|
|
5-year fix |
5.49% |
£1,549 |
60% |
|
|
3-year fix |
5.49% |
3% |
80% |
|
|
2-year fix |
5.79% |
2.5% |
80% |
|
|
5-year fix |
5.79% |
3.5% |
70% |
|
|
5-year fix |
5.93% |
2.25% |
75% |
|
|
5-year fix |
5.89% |
£1,495 |
75% |
|
|
3-year fix |
5.89% |
£2,699 |
80% |
11 top buy-to-let variable rates
|
LENDER |
TYPE OF DEAL |
RATE |
FEE |
MAX LTV |
|
2-year tracker |
3.64% (Base + 3.14) |
3.5% |
60% |
|
|
Term tracker |
3.88% (Base + 3.38) |
£1,695 |
65% |
|
|
2-year tracker |
3.79% (Base + 3.29) |
3.5% |
60% |
|
|
2-year tracker |
4.24% (Base + 3.74) |
3.5% |
75% |
|
|
2-year tracker |
4.59% (Base + 4.09) |
£995 |
75% |
|
|
2-year tracker |
4.79% (Base + 4.29) |
2.5% |
75% |
|
|
2-year tracker |
4.85% (Base + 4.35) |
£999 |
60% |
|
|
2-year discount |
4.98% (Base + 4.48) |
1.25% |
65% |
|
|
2-year tracker |
4.99% (Base + 4.49) |
£1,999 |
75% |
|
|
Term LIBOR-linked tracker* |
4.99% (LIBOR + 4.26%) |
1.5% |
75% |
|
|
Term variable rate |
4.99% |
£2,999 |
70% |
*London Interbank Offered Rate (0.73)
More: Bad news for landlords | Five reasons to be cheerful about the property market
Use lovemoney.com's innovative new mortgage tool now to find the best mortgage for you online
At lovemoney.com, you can research all the best deals yourself using our online mortgage service, or speak directly to a whole-of-market, fee free lovemoney.com broker. Call 0800 804 8045 or email mortgages@lovemoney.com for more help.
This article aims to give information, not advice. Always do your own research and/or seek out advice from an FSA-regulated broker (such as one of our brokers here at lovemoney.com), before acting on anything contained in this article.
Finally, we tend to only give the initial rate of a deal in our articles, but any deal which lasts for a shorter period than your mortgage term may revert to the lender's standard variable rate or a tracker rate when the deal ends. Before you take out a deal, you should always try to find out from your lender what its standard variable rate is and how it will be determined in the future. Make sure you take all this information into account when comparing different deals.
Your home or property may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage.
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