Sunderland Echo

New equity release savings

Customers will be able to cut interest costs, reports Vicky Shaw

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New equity release customers will be able to make penaltyfre­e partial loan repayments as standard if they wish to, on schemes recognised by a trade body.

The Equity Release Council said the option to make penaltyfre­e partial loan repayments will become a new “product standard” or prerequisi­te for plans it recognises.

The move could increase the chances of homeowners using equity release products still being able to leave behind a traditiona­l inheritanc­e.

Equity release allows people aged over 55 to borrow against the value of their home without making repayments, unless they choose to.

The interest and loan are usually settled when the customer dies or moves into permanent care. Equity release does need careful considerat­ion and it can mean that there is less of an inheritanc­e to pass on.

There may be alternativ­e options to raise money which do not involve debt, such as down sizing to a smaller property, selling other assets, or moving to a less expensive area.

The Council said the option to make penalty-free partial loan repayments has become an increasing­ly common feature of modern equity release products. It enables customers to mitigate the effects of interest on equity release loans building up over time.

New customers will be able to make penalty-free partial repayments to reduce their loan size, subject to lending criteria.

The Council said customers can typically repay up to a certain percentage of their loans per year if they choose to, with no obligation to make further repayments until they die or move into care.

While many products cap penalty-free repayments at 10% of the original loan per year, some products allow up to 40%, it added.

The Council already has four product standards for plans it recognises – including a right to remain living at home for life, a fixed or capped interest rate for life, a no-negative-equity guarantee and the right to move a loan to another property subject to criteria.

It said customers with lifetime mortgages, which account for the majority of equity release products, made more than £78 million of penalty-free partial loan repayments last year, collective­ly reducing their interest costs by nearly £100 million over the next 20 years.

This reduced their interest costs and increased their chances of leaving a traditiona­l inheritanc­e to loved ones when they die, the Council said.

More than 125,000 penaltyfre­e part repayments were made in 2021, averaging £608 each time.

The Council’s standards, rules and guidance set out additional voluntary requiremen­ts for product providers, financial advisers, legal profession­als and others involved in the equity release process. They sit alongside firms’ regulatory responsibi­lities.

Nearly 700 firms have signed up to operate in line with Council standards.

Jim Boyd, chief executive of the Equity Release Council, said: “The right to remain in your home for life, with no requiremen­t to make ongoing repayment sand no threat of repossessi­on, has been central to the appeal of equity release since 1991 and remains a core pillar of the modern market.

“Our new product standard adds to this by ensuring people have the freedom to reduce their borrowing if circumstan­ces change. It enables equity release customers to mitigate the effects of compound interest and reduce their borrowing costs in later life, which we know is often one of their main concerns.

“The market’s evolution means many customers are already saving tens of millions of pounds in interest costs by making penalty-free partial repayments as and when they can afford to.

By introducin­g the new product standard, we expect many more customers are set to benefit as all new products will have this safeguard built in.”

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