The Scotsman

Property boom for first-time buyers

● More available mortgages boost people getting onto property ladder

- By JANE BRADLEY Consumer affairs correspond­ent

The mortgage market has shown strong growth in Scotland, with first-time buyers and remortgagi­ng levels at their highest for a decade, new figures have revealed.

Property experts said that a relaxation in the availabili­ty of mortgages for first-time buyers had made it easier for people to get on the property ladder.

The report, from UK Finance, the finance and banking industry trade body, showed there were 8,800 new first-time buyer mortgages completed in Scotland in the fourth quarter of 2017, 3.5 per cent more than in the same quarter of the previous year. The value of loans to first-time buyers – who are typically 29 years old and have an income of £35,000 – rocketed even higher, up almost 10 per cent to £1.01 billion.

The average loan to a first time buyer in the last quarter of last year reached £106,000, around 85 per cent of the typical home value – 3.13 times the average salary.

Meanwhile, a total of 9,100 new home mover mortgages were completed in the same period – 8.3 per cent higher than the same period in 2016.

However, home movers tend to have an average age of 39 – and a much higher salary of £51,000. The typical property for home movers is worth just 2.86 times their salary.

Paul Hilton, chief executive of SPC Scotland, which represents property solicitors across the country, said: “The good news for first-time buyers is that with more mortgage options available, it is increasing­ly possible to find one that is suited to their needs and affordabil­ity.

“With 95 per cent mortgages available, this means that there is also less demand on the amount of deposit required to buy a property. With the 2017-18 Scottish Government budget introducin­g a 0 Paul Hilton of SPC Scotland welcomed the ‘good news’ tax relief for first-time buyers on properties worth £175,000 or less, we hope this means that owning a home is not just a dream but a reality for firsttime buyers.”

Carol Anderson, chair of UK Finance’s Scotland Mortgage Committee, said: “The mortgage market has shown strong growth in Scotland, with firsttime buyers and remortgagi­ng levels at their highest for a decade.

“Remortgagi­ng has also risen by a fifth compared to the same period in 2016, which demonstrat­es homeowners are shopping around.”

The data also showed that a total of 8,600 Scottish homeowners remortgage­d their property in the fourth quarter, some 17.8 per cent more than in the same period in 2016. The £1.05bn of remortgagi­ng in the fourth quarter was 18 per cent higher year-on-year.

The Scottish figures were a contrast to UK Finance’s data for London, where growth in the number of first-time buyers remained flat. Meanwhile, Wales and Northern Ireland showed similar lev- els of growth to Scotland. UK Finance was formed last year to represent around 300 firms in the UK the finance and banking industry. It brings together most of the activities previously carried out by organisati­ons including the Asset Based Finance Associatio­n, the British Bankers’ Associatio­n, the Council of Mortgage Lenders, Financial Fraud Action UK, Payments UK and the UK Cards Associatio­n.

Last week, separate research from the Institute of Fiscal Studies found that young adults are far less likely to own a home than ever before, with the decline in property ownership found to be most significan­t amongst young individual­s aged between 25 and 34.

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