Mortgage Rate Rises

Probably more relevant adding income.

Because 200k earning 200k is a lot different to 200k earning 40k

200k left
85k household income (2 salaries)
 
Probably more relevant adding income.

Because 200k earning 200k is a lot different to 200k earning 40k

200k left
85k household income (2 salaries)
48K .. 2 of us .. .. :) it's not much but will do for the next 3 yrs so we can semi retire at 60 :)
 
£670k mortgage! Yikes!!

Most my mortgage ever was for was £38k!! Many moons ago!!
I guess it depends on where you live, and that's the problem, my exact same house a mile away over the border wouldn't be far off that for nothing special, and all those bigger houses between the two probably average out at a million each at least.

I'll just stay in the ghettos it's not that bad :)
 
48K .. 2 of us .. .. :) it's not much but will do for the next 3 yrs so we can semi retire at 60 :)

200k makes it too hard to work out retiring

I'd rather have more holidays a longer mortgage and work more at the moment.

Only just been able to do this in last 2 years.

23 years left on mortgage. Could probably pay it off in 10 but fun (optional) stuff would take a hit. Like buying my van etc.
 
You can take a reasonable stab at incoming by looking at the mortgage. I mean my other half and I haven't gotten half a million on £25k a year :)

I'm with @413x though, yes we overpay slightly and we do/did plan to more but at the same time I could drop dead tomorrow so within acceptable limits I'm happy to let it run it's course.
 
I get you guys wincing at a £630k mortgage but that’s just the reality of buying a house in London and the south east in 2023.

@dlockers has posted loads of renovation pictures of his house in home and garden and it’s a pretty normal size house and ‘in need of modernisation’ when he got it.
Also the reality of getting no leg up/generational wealth so my LTV sucks.
 
I get you guys wincing at a £630k mortgage but that’s just the reality of buying a house in London and the south east in 2023.

@dlockers has posted loads of renovation pictures of his house in home and garden and it’s a pretty normal size house and ‘in need of modernisation’ when he got it.

Also the reality of getting no leg up/generational wealth so my LTV sucks.

Checking in as I tick both of these boxes too. I'll be extremely lucky if I can clear my mortgage before I retire, but on current trends I'll be cashing out part of my pension to clear the last of it with these interest rates.
 
Checking in as I tick both of these boxes too. I'll be extremely lucky if I can clear my mortgage before I retire, but on current trends I'll be cashing out part of my pension to clear the last of it with these interest rates.
That's a great idea tbf. Need to math
 
We will have 500K and 29 years left to go at renewal in 2025 (with 200K of equity in the property), combined salaries of 165K.

It's surprisingly close to being unaffordable at anything over 5% mortgage rate. Though I guess our salaries will go up a bit over the next 2 years.

We could probably manage 6% - but it wouod be tight.
 
We will have 500K and 29 years left to go at renewal in 2025 (with 200K of equity in the property), combined salaries of 165K.

It's surprisingly close to being unaffordable at anything over 5% mortgage rate. Though I guess our salaries will go up a bit over the next 2 years.

We could probably manage 6% - but it wouod be tight.
Do you still have 200k equity in this market?
 
We will have 500K and 29 years left to go at renewal in 2025 (with 200K of equity in the property), combined salaries of 165K.

It's surprisingly close to being unaffordable at anything over 5% mortgage rate. Though I guess our salaries will go up a bit over the next 2 years.

We could probably manage 6% - but it wouod be tight.
Don't underestimate piece of mind value into your calcs as well as a reserve for life contingencies. Sounds like you're already feeling it and who's to say rates will only go down.

If anyone works in the mortgage industry feel free to correct but I think banks like to use 35% of your net monthly take-home as an acceptable yard stick. If you stretch yourself too much even if nothing bad happens that mental fatigue and stress can't be worth it imo.
 
Judging by a bunch of stuff that's gone up for sale around me we're acting like nothing much has changed.
Yep. If anything it's gone up. A house much worse than mine has sold for about what I paid (waiting for land registry to update).
 
Up for sale means little, it's completed transactions that matter.

This guy sold his house and seems to revel in the negative news. He is presenting facts though and it doesn't seem that great to me.

 
Up for sale means little, it's completed transactions that matter.

This guy sold his house and seems to revel in the negative news. He is presenting facts though and it doesn't seem that great to me.

Post your own thoughts instead of someone else's?
 
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