Clear your Help to Buy equity loan with one remortgage, with our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers managing the case from valuation to redemption.








Year 6 is when many Dartford Help to Buy owners decide to act. The equity loan that felt manageable at purchase starts charging 1.75% interest, plus the £1 monthly management fee, and that cost then rises under the scheme rules. Our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers compare deals across HTB-friendly lenders and manage the whole case, from the Red Book valuation through to the solicitor work needed for Target HCA. For owners around Victoria Road, Watling Street and Overy Street, that usually means one bigger remortgage that clears both the existing mortgage and the Help to Buy balance on completion.
Dartford cases need proper coordination because the lender, the valuer and the solicitor all rely on the same repayment figure. A flat in DA1 can look very different on affordability from a house in DA2, especially where the current value has moved on since purchase and the redemption sum has grown with it. Our whole-of-market brokers deal with that every day. We line up the valuation, check any Early Repayment Charge on your current mortgage, filter lenders that accept Help to Buy redemption borrowing, and keep the Target HCA timetable moving so funds are in place on the right day.

£389,000
Median sold price, Dartford
+0.3%
12-month sold price change
1,023
Property sales in last 12 months
£245,000
Flat sold price, Dartford
£77,800
Typical 20% HTB equity loan at current Dartford sold-price level
£49,000
Example 20% HTB equity loan on current Dartford flat sold-price level
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Most owners in Dartford clear the loan by replacing it with a larger mortgage. The maths is simple, even if the paperwork is not. Your new mortgage usually covers your current mortgage balance, your Help to Buy redemption figure and any product fees, then your solicitor sends the redemption money to Target HCA on completion. That is often the cleanest route for owners in developments such as Victoria Quarter on Victoria Road, where apartment purchases commonly sat in the Help to Buy price range when first bought.
Here is a realistic Dartford example using the current flat sold-price level. Say you bought a DA1 flat years ago for £210,000 with a 20% Help to Buy loan of £42,000, and your mortgage balance has since reduced to £145,000. If the property is now worth £245,000, matching the current flat sold-price figure recorded by homedata.co.uk, a full redemption means paying back 20% of that current value, which is £49,000, not the original £42,000. Your new mortgage would therefore need to cover £145,000 plus £49,000, and then any lender fee if you choose to add it.
That jump is why local price movement matters. homedata.co.uk records a Dartford-wide sold-price change of +0.3% over 12 months, but many Help to Buy owners are looking at a much longer period than one year, so the loan repayment can be quite a bit higher than they expected at purchase. A borrower who bought near Copperhouse Green on Overy Street or at an earlier phase in DA2 may find the rising redemption figure is now the main issue, not the original mortgage. That is exactly where our advisers step in, because lender policy, current value and affordability all have to line up.
Not every remortgage lender will accept Help to Buy redemption borrowing in the same way. Some want a tighter loan-to-value, some are more cautious on flats, some need specific wording from the solicitor, and some treat product-fee additions differently. Our brokers filter that at the start, before you waste time on the wrong lender. In a place like Dartford, where the stock ranges from town-centre flats in DA1 to larger houses off Watling Street in DA2, that lender selection matters.
Illustrative annual interest cost on a £49,000 Help to Buy equity loan, based on the current Dartford flat sold-price level recorded by homedata.co.uk and the scheme rate structure. Interest is 0% in years 1 to 5, then 1.75% from year 6, plus a £1 monthly management fee.
Lender choice is where many Help to Buy redemptions go wrong. Some lenders that look competitive on a normal remortgage do not fit once the case includes a Target HCA redemption, a Red Book valuation and a completion statement that must release enough money to clear the equity loan. Around Dartford Station, Victoria Road and the Bridgefield development on Watling Street, that can mean a product that looks good online is not actually usable for the case you need.
Our whole-of-market brokers filter for that from day one. We look at whether the lender accepts a simultaneous remortgage and Help to Buy redemption, how they treat flats and new-build homes, what loan-to-value bands matter after redemption, and how the mortgage offer needs to be worded for the solicitor. For owners in DA1 and DA2, specialist familiarity is what saves time, because the lender criteria and the Target HCA process have to work together.
We review your current mortgage, your Help to Buy balance, your property type and any Early Repayment Charge. For a flat in DA1 near Overy Street, we also check service-charge and lease details if the lender will need them.
Our brokers source an AIP with lenders that are open to Help to Buy redemption cases. That gives you a live affordability sense before the full application goes in.
A RICS valuer prepares the valuation that Target HCA will use. This figure is critical because it sets the redemption amount on a property in places such as Victoria Road, Wilmington or Greenhithe.
Once the valuation figure is clear, we submit the full case with the borrowing amount sized for the current mortgage, the HTB redemption and any agreed fees. This is where lender criteria on flats, income and loan-to-value all matter.
The lender issues the offer if the case stacks up. Your solicitor can then use that offer to move the redemption process along with Target HCA.
A solicitor experienced in Help to Buy redemptions files the Redemption Application and deals with Target HCA through the portal. They also line up the completion statement so the money reaches the right place on time.
On completion day, the new mortgage repays your old lender and redeems the Help to Buy loan. After that, you own the property without the equity loan attached, whether it is a town-centre flat in Dartford or a house in Bridgefield.
Get the Red Book valuation booked before the full application is submitted. In Dartford cases, the valuation figure is what fixes the repayment amount, and the lender needs that number to size the mortgage offer properly. A delay here can hold up everything after it, including the solicitor pack and the Target HCA timetable.
Dartford price levels have a direct effect on the size of your redemption. homedata.co.uk records a current sold-price figure of £389,000 across the area, which means a 20% equity loan at today’s market level would equate to £77,800. That does not mean every owner owes that sum, but it shows the scale. In places with active modern stock like Bridgefield, Copperhouse Green and Victoria Quarter, borrowers often realise the Help to Buy loan has grown far beyond the figure they first had in mind.
Flats need especially careful handling. homedata.co.uk shows a current Dartford flats sold-price figure of £245,000, and 20% of that is £49,000. For an owner in DA1 who still owes £145,000 on the main mortgage, the new loan might need to sit around £194,000 before fees. On a £245,000 value, that points to a post-redemption loan-to-value near 79.2%, which can open more lender options than people expect, because the property may now be worth more than it was at purchase.
Houses create a different affordability picture. The current sold-price figure is £431,000 for semis and £360,000 for terraces according to homedata.co.uk, with detached homes at £629,000. A former Help to Buy buyer in a house on Watling Street or near Wilmington may be redeeming a much larger sum than a flat owner, but if their income has risen since purchase and the mortgage balance has reduced, the case can still work. Our advisers test that early so you know where you stand.
Context matters street by street. The River Darent corridor, the older stock around Dartford Town Centre Conservation Area, and the newer apartment-heavy pockets in DA1 can all affect lender appetite through valuation comments, lease terms or insurance requirements. We also see cases where flood-risk questions come up for homes close to the Darent Valley or north towards the Thames-side industrial land. That does not stop a remortgage by itself, but it does mean the lender and valuer need the file presented properly.
The key calculation is simple. Add together your current mortgage balance, your Help to Buy redemption figure and any product fees you plan to roll in, then compare that total with the property’s current market value. A DA1 flat valued at £245,000 with a £145,000 mortgage and a £49,000 redemption produces borrowing of £194,000 before fees. That is why many Dartford owners find their post-redemption loan-to-value is not as stretched as they feared.
Rising values help, but only if the income side also works. Lenders still test affordability against the new mortgage size, your credit profile and your outgoings, and they may look closely at service charge on flats near Overy Street or Victoria Road. Someone moving from an older low-rate deal to a higher remortgage payment may still save money long term if it gets rid of the Help to Buy interest and future annual increases. Our brokers run those numbers in pounds and pence before you commit.
Fixed-rate timing also matters. Plenty of Dartford borrowers are still inside a fixed period on their current mortgage, especially those who bought in later Help to Buy phases near Copperhouse Green or Bridgefield. If an Early Repayment Charge applies, we work out whether redeeming now still makes financial sense or whether waiting until the fix ends is the stronger move. The answer depends on your ERC, your new borrowing amount and how quickly the Help to Buy charges are building.
Help to Buy redemptions are not just standard remortgages with one extra form. The Target HCA process needs a Red Book valuation that matches the scheme rules, a solicitor who knows how to file the redemption application, and a mortgage offer that releases enough money on completion. In Dartford, we often see owners around Victoria Road or DA2 lose time because one document was ordered too late. That delay can push the valuation close to expiry and force more work.
Our advisers and case managers keep all parts moving together. We chase the valuation, confirm the redemption amount, keep the lender updated and make sure the solicitor has what they need for the Target HCA portal. For homes near Dartford Town Centre Conservation Area, older leasehold blocks in DA1 or newer schemes by Weston Homes, Bellway and Barratt London, that joined-up handling cuts down avoidable hold-ups. It is a practical service, not just rate sourcing.
Fees are kept clear. We offer a free initial consultation and, in most cases, we are paid a procuration fee by the lender at completion. Some specialist Help to Buy cases can attract a flat advice fee, but that is disclosed upfront before you proceed. No guesswork.
The local housing mix matters because valuers and lenders read different stock in different ways. Local data shows terraced homes account for 30.1% of stock, semi-detached homes 31.5%, detached homes 14.2% and flats 23.6%. That spread is reflected on the ground, from older terraces in the town area to newer apartment blocks around Victoria Road and larger family houses further out. Help to Buy owners are heavily represented in the newer flat and house schemes, so lender criteria on leasehold and modern construction come up often.
Older homes bring a separate set of valuation points. Around Dartford Town Centre, Wilmington and Sutton-at-Hone, valuers may note issues linked to older brick construction, damp, roofing repairs or movement history, especially where the area moves from chalk to patches of clay-rich ground. A valuation comment does not automatically derail a case, but it can affect the lender selected. Our brokers factor that in before application.
Newer schemes can look simpler but still need care. Apartment developments such as Victoria Quarter and Copperhouse Green may involve service charges, management-company documents and lender checks around the block itself, while houses at Bridgefield may raise standard new-build questions if bought recently. We know which lenders are comfortable in those settings and which ones tend to add friction. That saves time.
No. Some lenders are comfortable with a remortgage that repays your current mortgage and the Help to Buy loan in one go, while others are more limited on criteria, property type or loan-to-value. In Dartford, that difference shows up a lot on flats in DA1 and newer homes around Bridgefield, so our whole-of-market brokers filter the lender list before you apply.
Yes, in most cases you need a RICS Red Book valuation that Target HCA will accept. That valuation sets the repayment amount, which matters a lot in Dartford because the loan is redeemed as a percentage of current value, not the original amount. A flat around Victoria Road or Overy Street can therefore produce a higher redemption figure than the one you borrowed at purchase.
Timescales vary, but the process is usually driven by three moving parts: the valuation, the lender and the solicitor. A clean case on a straightforward property in DA2 can move faster than a leasehold flat in DA1 where the lender needs extra documents. Booking the valuation early tends to save the most time.
Yes, partial repayment is possible under the scheme rules, subject to the minimum chunk size that applies at the time and the valuation process. Some Dartford owners use that route when a full redemption is not affordable yet, particularly on flats where service charge and mortgage affordability already bite. We can compare partial repayment against a full remortgage so you can see the trade-off clearly.
You may have to pay an Early Repayment Charge if you remortgage before your current fixed deal ends. That does not always mean you should wait. For a Dartford owner paying year-6 Help to Buy interest on top of their mortgage, the right move depends on the ERC figure, the new mortgage payment and the current redemption amount, and our brokers calculate that before you decide.
It is based on today’s value because the equity loan is a percentage share of the property. Using the current Dartford flat sold-price figure of £245,000 from homedata.co.uk as an example, a 20% loan would redeem at £49,000. That is why borrowers near Copperhouse Green or Victoria Quarter often find the amount due is higher than the number they remember from completion day.
Sometimes, yes. Some existing lenders allow a product transfer with additional borrowing, while others require a full remortgage or have tighter rules for equity-loan redemption. We check that first because staying with the same lender can be simpler for some Dartford borrowers, but it is not always the cheapest or the most flexible route.
Leasehold does not stop the process, but it can add checks. On flats in DA1, lenders may want details on the remaining lease term, service charge, ground rent position and block management, and your solicitor may need extra documents. That is normal. It just means the case needs to be packaged properly from the outset.
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Find a Red Book valuation route for your Dartford Help to Buy redemption.
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Clear your Help to Buy equity loan with one remortgage, with our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers managing the case from valuation to redemption.
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