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How does the help to buy interest rate work

Chief executive of Worldwide Financial Planning, Peter McGahan explains how interest rates are affecting mortgages

Peter McGahan, chief executive of Worldwide Financial Planning(Image: © Richard Trainor)

Last week I covered a column I wrote in 2018 regarding interest rates moving to seven per cent or above and stress testing at that level. A second part of that column related to the risks to ‘help to buy’ where I mentioned that 40% of those buying were on an income of below £40,000, which meant they had a very low disposable income.

The real risk was that there could “come a point where borrowers will be forced to refinance the debt scheme, but that may be at a time when the costs of borrowing and the ability to borrow may be too high – the ultimate golden handcuff”.

Well hey presto, that’s now.

I had several calls and emails regarding last week’s column around interest rates as well as the costs and risks, and this column will hopefully answer the worries around help to buy. But let’s first understand something that is very poorly communicated on the ‘help to buy’ scheme and its costs.

Borrowers have been worried about the new interest rate they will pay on the amount they have borrowed from the government. Around 380,000 people have used the scheme which was introduced in 2013 to help people get on the 'ladder’. You can borrow up to 20% from the government to get onto the scheme (40% in London).

The first five years was interest free, but after that, the borrower had to repay interest on the loan (as well as the mortgage they had).

And that’s where the confusion arises. The wording on the government website states: “In the sixth year, you’ll be charged interest at a rate of 1.75%. The interest rate increases every year in April, by adding the Consumer Price Index (CPI) plus 2%.”

When reading about the scheme in pretty much all of the websites I could see, the wording is the same everywhere. And so, most borrowers would now be having a little bit of a freak out – due to the wording.