Sunday Star-Times

‘The mortgage brokers, when I was a single a house and living in Wellington, they didn’t

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Carrie bought a home in July 2021 after renting in Wellington for a long time. She says she had a good set-up as a tenant, in a house out in Shelly Bay, which then became the site of a land dispute between a developer and occupiers protesting the developmen­t.

‘‘I was living out there for seven years and then the occupation moved in and the developer kicked everyone out.’’

Carrie initially lived there with her former partner and their two children, and says the rent was stable during her tenure. ‘‘All the rent around town went up but that rent stayed the same. It was expensive when we moved in, for a three-bedroom house, but then everything else escalated. It was a cheap place to be living after the relationsh­ip broke down.’’

She was given three months’ notice and started looking for another place to rent for herself and two children, then aged nine and four, but couldn’t find anything suitable. ‘‘I didn’t really feel like I was going to get any certainty out of renting in the area.’’

She had $40,000 in her KiwiSaver and borrowed another $80,000 from her parents. ‘‘They don’t have a lot of money. That was their retirement fund – they don’t own a house but they put it in and I bought a house in Whanganui. I couldn’t buy in Wellington.’’

Carrie says she was still owed a significan­t amount of money from the business that she owned with her former partner. Moving to a different town was an opportunit­y to leave some of the trauma behind and start afresh. ‘‘Through all of that, the separation, I lost my job and I have been on the single parent benefit since then.

‘‘Whanganui was a great escape for me.’’ Initially, she says, she felt there was little hope of someone giving her a mortgage, but she spoke to a couple of mortgage brokers and started to think there could be a chance. ‘‘I thought, ‘Hang on, I might be able to do this’.’’

Some mortgage advisers didn’t seem interested in the ‘‘curly circumstan­ces’’ of her applicatio­n, she says, but she was told that working through a broker would be a good option because they would speak to a number of providers on her behalf. ‘‘I didn’t find that to be the case at all. A lot didn’t seem to view the benefit as income. I spoke to a few banks that were recommende­d to me as being a bit less risk-averse. None of them seemed that interested in me until Westpac said, ‘Why don’t you go to your own bank?’’’

‘‘The mortgage brokers, when I was a single mum on a benefit trying to buy a house and living in Wellington, they didn’t seem to want to know me. They didn’t take the time to get to know my situation.’’

Although Carrie had been given the impression that it was a long shot, she applied to Kiwibank, which she says was ‘‘actually great’’. ‘‘They were over and above helpful, they genuinely wanted me to get a home. I don’t know if it was because of my banking history or they were hungry for more

business, but it felt more genuine and connected.

‘‘I got a loan through them, and every day I wake up in this house and think, ‘I am so lucky’. All the solo mothers I know in Wellington have to move from rental to rental every year and it’s just horrific, it’s so hard on the kids.’’

The bank asked about her childcare costs and how much she spent on school uniforms but Carrie was undeterred. She qualified for a Ka¯inga Ora First Home Grant of $5000 because the house was under the area’s $400,000 price cap. ‘‘I offered $415,000 and then negotiated down to be under the threshold because it needed some repairs.’’

Carrie says it seemed to help that she was applying from Wellington, so the house prices in Whanganui seemed extremely affordable in contrast. The house she bought is a 1950s solid weatherboa­rd home on a concrete pad, ‘‘mostly identical to all the other houses on the street. I’m not sure if it was a state house but it has three bedrooms. There’s nothing glamorous about it, it’s not a fancy villa, it hasn’t got beautiful wooden floors but it’s incredibly functional and well built.’’

Carrie says she had a feeling of desperatio­n being stuck in an insecure housing situation. ‘‘I’m 38, I’ve been through a traumatic time and I was wanting to provide that stability. What it’s done for my mental health and getting back on my feet . . . housing is a human right and it feels like we’ve lost our way in New Zealand. I’m one of the lucky ones and I feel unbelievab­ly grateful.’’

She and her former partner had been trying to buy a house in Wellington but kept missing out. ‘‘We had been in the process of making offers on places and missing out by $30,000 so we’d have to go back to the bank and increase the amount we could borrow and shuffle things around to increase our loan and then the next house we put an offer on we would miss out by $30,000. It was constant scrabbling to buy a place.

Luckily it didn’t eventuate.’’

Carrie fixed her mortgage for a period that runs until her youngest child goes to school. ‘‘The bank recommende­d getting the fixed rate until she goes to school so I can increase my hours when I do work.’’

She says the local community has been welcoming and there are other people moving into town from Auckland and Wellington. ‘‘A lot of people are moving here so house prices are going up significan­tly. The locals seem really welcoming, although they’re not happy about house prices going up! It’s such a great town. Now I’m here and looking around thinking it would be nice to have a dishwasher ... I don’t have the disposable income yet, I’m still looking for a job. The kids can walk to school and there are kids next door on both sides, it’s really lovely. I couldn’t have had that in Wellington in the area where my son went to school. The houses there are all over $1.2 million at the moment.’’

 ?? ?? From Renter to Owner is published by Allen&Unwin. RRP $29.99.
From Renter to Owner is published by Allen&Unwin. RRP $29.99.

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