Clear your equity loan with a remortgage that fits the numbers








HTB redemptions in WR11 are rarely simple. Our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers handle the path from the Red Book valuation to the Target HCA paperwork, so you can remortgage and clear the equity loan without selling the home. This is the old Help to Buy equity loan scheme, not a Help to Buy ISA or LISA, and the paperwork needs the right order.
Evesham's current average listing price is £395,670 according to home.co.uk, while the average asking price sits at £377,800. That matters because the repayment figure follows the property's current value, not the price you paid in the first place. A higher listing can lift the redemption sum quickly, which is why timing and valuation matter in Wychavon.
A three-bed in Evesham is listed at £339,815 on the research we hold, and a 20% equity loan on that figure is £67,963. If the same home is now valued nearer £395,670, the redemption jumps to £79,134, a difference of £11,171 before fees. In year 6, the Help to Buy charge itself moves to 1.75% plus the £1 monthly management fee, then RPI+1% after that, so waiting can make the bill heavier.

£377,800
Overall Average Asking Price
£395,670
Current Average Listing Price
£384,182
Detached Houses
£118,500
Flats
£153,542
1-bed Homes
£239,865
2-bed Homes
£339,815
3-bed Homes
£525,600
4-bed Homes
£935,096
5-bed Homes
4.41%
6-Month Listing Move
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
For many owners in WR11, the cleanest route is a single larger mortgage that clears both the old balance and the Help to Buy equity loan. Our whole-of-market brokers compare lenders that will accept that structure, then line up the valuation, application and solicitor work so the redemption can complete on one day. It is a practical route, not a flashy one.
The maths is straightforward, even if the paperwork is not. Take a three-bed at £339,815, one of Evesham's headline price points from home.co.uk. A 20% equity loan on that purchase is £67,963. If the home is now closer to the current average listing price of £395,670, the same 20% repayment becomes £79,134, which changes the mortgage size you need before fees are added.
That is why a lot of homeowners do not just ask for a new rate. They ask for new borrowing, because the remortgage has to cover the mortgage balance, the redemption amount and the product costs. If you still owe £180,000 on the existing mortgage, your new loan would need to reach £259,134 before you even think about legal fees or any early repayment charge.
The year 6 charge on the HTB loan is another reason to move. The loan charges 1.75% plus the £1 monthly management fee after year 5, and after that it follows RPI+1%, so a household in Wychavon can see the cost rise while the property itself has already drifted upwards in value.
Illustrative on a £60,000 Help to Buy loan. The remortgage bar uses a 5.00% comparison rate only, not a quote. Local price context comes from home.co.uk.
Not every lender will take a Help to Buy redemption on board, and that is the part many Evesham owners only find out after an AIP. Our whole-of-market brokers filter out the lenders that will not deal with the redemption sum, then focus on the ones used to seeing Target HCA valuations and solicitor paperwork. That saves time in WR11, where the loan amount can shift with the valuation.
The key point is simple. The new mortgage has to cover the old balance, the equity-loan figure and any fees, so a lender needs the Red Book number before it sizes the deal. In Evesham, where home.co.uk shows the current average listing price at £395,670, a small change in the valuation can change what fits. The broker's job is to work through those figures before the case goes live.
A lender may be happy with the file, then ask for one more piece of evidence. That does not mean the case has failed, it means the lender wants the paperwork in the right order. Our advisers keep the file moving so the Target portal, solicitor and mortgage offer are all pointing to the same redemption figure.
We start with the balance on your current mortgage, the Help to Buy loan details and the fixed-rate end date if one applies. In WR11, that first look tells us if a remortgage is realistic before we book anything else.
We test the borrowing range with a lender that can handle HTB redemption borrowing. This gives you a working figure before the full application goes in.
A RICS valuer carries out the valuation that Target HCA will accept. This step sets the redemption figure, so the number must be right.
We submit the income, expenditure and property details to the lender. If the loan size needs to cover £79,134 of redemption on a home near £395,670, that has to be shown clearly in the case.
The lender issues the formal offer once the checks pass. The offer has to match the redemption figure, the fees and the rest of the case, so nothing is left vague.
Your HTB-experienced solicitor files the Redemption Application through Target's portal. That is the bit many mainstream conveyancers do not deal with every day.
Funds move on the completion date, the equity loan is redeemed and the charge is cleared. At that point the Help to Buy account should be shut down, and the mortgage is the only borrowing left.
In WR11, it usually pays to book the Red Book valuation before the Agreement in Principle. The lender can then see the repayment figure early, which helps it size the mortgage against the actual equity-loan amount rather than a guess. That is a small sequencing change, but it can save time in Evesham.
Evesham's current average listing price of £395,670 is higher than the average asking price of £377,800, and the research pack also records a separate 6-month figure of -1.6%. That mixed picture is exactly why we look at the live valuation, not a headline snapshot, before anyone in WR11 commits to redemption. The price you can prove today matters more than the one in a market summary.
A higher value can help the loan-to-value after redemption. If your original purchase was a 3-bed at £339,815 and you redeem a 20% equity loan, the payoff figure is £79,134 at today's average listing level. A mortgage of £259,134 against a £395,670 property lands at about 65.5% LTV before fees, which is a very different shape from a high-LTV purchase.
That LTV can open better products than the ones available at purchase, but affordability still decides the case. A lender will look at income, outgoings and any other debt before it agrees that the higher borrowing fits the file. In Worcestershire, the property value can look generous on paper, then the income test pulls the file back to earth.
The fixed-rate question matters too. If your current deal still has months left, an early repayment charge may sit on top, but our advisers compare that cost with the HTB interest at 1.75% from year 6 and the extra management fee. That is where the figures in Wychavon need a proper side-by-side check, not a guess.
We also see plenty of cases where the local market has moved just enough to change the plan. A 4-bed in Evesham is listed at £525,600, while a flat is down at £118,500, so the gap between property types is wide. That spread affects how much of the loan can be redeemed through remortgaging and how much borrowing the lender will accept.
The numbers in WR11 often look better after redemption than they did at purchase. A home that started at £339,815 and now sits near £395,670 has grown enough to soften the LTV, even though the redemption figure has also grown. That is why Evesham homeowners often want the valuation first, then the lender check.
Using the 3-bed example, the new mortgage would cover £180,000 of old balance, £79,134 of HTB redemption and perhaps £999 of product fees. Against the current value of £395,670, that is about 65.7% LTV once the fee is added. The shape is workable for some borrowers, but not all, so the affordability test has to run before the offer is issued.
A useful rule in Evesham is to treat the property value and the repayment figure as linked, not separate. If the home rises, the equity loan rises with it. That is good news for the lender's security and often for the rate band, but it also means the redemption sum needs to be sized properly from day one.
Our HTB-specialist advisers keep the case grounded in those figures. We check the mortgage balance, the redemption amount and the likely costs around Target HCA before recommending the route. In a market like WR11, the detail matters more than the headline.
No, they do not. Some lenders are happy to let you remortgage and clear the Help to Buy loan in one go, while others want a simpler case. Our whole-of-market brokers filter the lenders that work with HTB redemption in Evesham, so you are not wasting time on the wrong applications.
Yes. Target HCA needs a RICS Red Book valuation for the redemption process, and the figure from that valuation is what the solicitor and lender work from. In WR11, using a market estimate instead of the correct valuation can leave the mortgage short of the redemption amount.
It usually takes several weeks, but the time can stretch if the valuation is delayed or the lender asks for more evidence. In Evesham, the fastest cases are the ones where the valuation, AIP and solicitor work are lined up early.
Yes. That is known as staircasing, and it can be a better fit if you want to reduce the equity loan rather than clear it fully. Our advisers can compare that route with a full remortgage, so you can see which one works best for your property in Wychavon.
You may have to pay an early repayment charge if you remortgage during a fix. That does not automatically rule the move out, because the saving from clearing the HTB charge can still outweigh the ERC, but your broker needs to run the numbers carefully.
Yes, because the equity loan is repaid as a share of the property's current value. If a 20% loan sits on a home that has moved from £339,815 to £395,670, the repayment amount rises from £67,963 to £79,134.
Yes, you do. The solicitor files the Redemption Application through Target's portal and handles the legal part of the completion. It is a specialist job, and a conveyancer who works with HTB cases will usually keep the process smoother.
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Help with the equity loan scheme, redemption route and lender checks in WR11
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Book the Red Book valuation needed for Target HCA
Varies
Solicitors used to the Target portal and redemption paperwork
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Remortgage options if you need to clear the equity loan
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Whole-of-market mortgage advice from advisers who handle HTB cases
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Homemove is a trading name of HM Haus Group Ltd (Company No. 13873779, registered in England & Wales). Homemove Mortgages Ltd (Company No. 15947693) is an Appointed Representative of TMG Direct Limited, trading as TMG Mortgage Network, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FRN 786245). Homemove Mortgages Ltd is entered on the FCA Register as an Appointed Representative (FRN 1022429). You can check registrations at NewRegister or by calling 0800 111 6768.