Remortgage to clear your equity loan, with our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers managing the full process.








Help to Buy bills start to bite from year 6, and many owners in Carterton want out before the annual charge steps up again. Our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers handle redemption cases across OX18 every week, including homes around Shilton Park, Burford Road and Monahan Way. We compare deals across HTB-friendly lenders, then structure one remortgage that can clear your current mortgage balance and your Target HCA redemption figure on completion day. You keep the home. You remove the equity loan. You move onto one standard mortgage product.
Our service is set up around the real Carterton process, not generic advice. We coordinate from your RICS Red Book valuation through to solicitor submission on the Target portal and final money flow to Target on completion. That matters in this market, where homedata.co.uk shows values have moved up and your redemption amount may be higher than expected. We also check your existing mortgage for any early repayment charge before recommendation, because fixed rate exits can change the numbers in year 6 and year 7.

£354,376
Median sold price indicator (overall average)
£434,220
Detached sold price
£315,796
Semi-detached sold price
£296,151
Terraced sold price
£169,500
Flat sold price
3.05%
Sold price change (12 months)
6%
Sold price change (last year vs previous year)
4.9%
OX18 3 annual growth
25
Agreed sales in March 2026
119 days
Average sale timeline
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Most Carterton Help to Buy owners repay by remortgaging, not by selling. The reason is practical. Once your loan passes the fee-free years, the cost starts at 1.75% in year 6, then rises by RPI plus 1% each year after that, with a £1 monthly management fee still payable. On a home near Bellenger Way or in the wider OX18 1NE patch, that ongoing charge can overtake the benefit of waiting. Our whole-of-market brokers model both routes side by side, using your current balance, current value and lender stress test.
Here is a realistic Carterton-style example using local sold values from homedata.co.uk. Say you bought at £300,000 with a 20% Help to Buy equity loan of £60,000 and a £240,000 mortgage. If that home is now worth £354,376, the 20% redemption amount is £70,875.20. If your current mortgage balance is £212,000, your new mortgage could be built at £282,875.20 before product fees and legal costs. That single loan then clears both debts on completion, subject to lender criteria and affordability checks.
This is where lender policy matters. Some mainstream lenders are open to simultaneous remortgage and Help to Buy redemption, while others restrict loan purpose, valuation approach, or solicitor panel handling for Target completions. Our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers filter that quickly, so you are not wasting time on a lender that cannot release funds in the right structure. We also plan around your current deal end date if your property is in Shilton Park or older Brizewood stock where timing mistakes can cost extra interest.
Local growth has been meaningful, with homedata.co.uk reporting 3.05% over 12 months and 6% year on year in sold data. Growth helps equity, but it also increases the redemption cheque because Target is repaid as a percentage of current value, not your original loan cash amount. That is the key point many owners miss until they request a redemption statement.
Illustration for Carterton owners based on Help to Buy fee rules (0% years 1-5, 1.75% year 6, then RPI+1% increases) and a £70,875.20 redemption amount.
Not every lender accepts Help to Buy redemption borrowing on the same terms. Some allow capital raising for Target HCA only with tighter LTV bands. Some require the Red Book valuation to be in a strict date window at offer stage. Others are fine with the structure but slow on case handling when a completion has to line up with Target authority and solicitor undertakings. Our brokers check those details before application so you do not lose weeks.
Carterton borrowers often come to us after being declined for a technical reason, not because their income is weak. Typical issues include wrong loan purpose coding, missing wording on the redemption statement, or a valuation date mismatch. We deal with these cases around Alvescot Road, Upavon Way and Burford Road where owners have mixed stock from post-war housing through to newer estates. A whole-of-market approach gives you access to lenders who are already comfortable with the HTB redemption process.
We review your current lender, fixed end date, income, credit profile and current estimate of value for your home in Carterton, including addresses around Shilton Park and Brize Meadow.
We place an AIP with an HTB-friendly lender based on likely borrowing need, then refine once the formal valuation figure lands.
You instruct a RICS valuer for a Red Book report accepted by Target HCA, using the exact property and tenure details needed for the redemption file.
Our broker submits the application with all documents, redemption purpose notes and any product fee instructions if fees are to be added to loan.
Once the lender offer arrives, we check loan amount, conditions and expiry against your Target timeline so funding does not fall out of date.
Your HTB-experienced solicitor submits the Redemption Application through Target’s portal and secures authority to complete with the exact repayment sum.
On completion day the remortgage funds clear your existing mortgage and the Target amount, then your charge is removed and you continue with one mortgage only.
Book your Red Book valuation early, ideally before your final lender selection. In Carterton, values have moved up and down across different pockets such as OX18 3 and the north side near Burford Road, so you want the lender sized to the actual redemption figure from day one. This reduces rework, helps avoid offer amendments, and can stop completion delays with Target authority dates.
Carterton’s price movement has a direct impact on your redemption amount. homedata.co.uk records an overall average sold price indicator of £354,376, with detached at £434,220 and semi-detached at £315,796. For owners who bought in early Shilton Park phases or in post-2000 expansion areas, that usually means a larger equity-loan repayment than the original cash borrowed. A 20% loan is still 20% today, so growth pushes the payback up.
The street-level context matters. Brize Meadow at Bellenger Way and Monahan Way has marketed homes from £390,000 to £600,000, while other Carterton stock includes older RAF-linked housing patterns around Brizewood and later private estates from the 1980s onward. Those different value bands can shift post-redemption LTV materially. A borrower redeeming from a £280,000 value sits in a very different rate bracket from a borrower redeeming on £430,000 plus, even before income is tested.
We also check how local employment patterns feed affordability. RAF Brize Norton is a major anchor with around 7,300 workers, and Carterton has a broad resident base that often combines base-related work with jobs across West Oxfordshire. Lenders handle overtime, allowances and contract structures in different ways. Our brokers package income cleanly, because case quality matters as much as headline salary when you are raising enough to clear Target.
Time risk is real here. homedata.co.uk indicates 25 agreed sales in March 2026 and an average sale timeline of 119 days, which shows why many owners choose remortgage redemption instead of listing and waiting. If your fixed rate is ending soon, that wait can stack costs from two directions at once, a higher revert mortgage rate plus a rising HTB charge. Clearing in one remortgage often avoids that squeeze.
Carterton is also seeing planned growth to the north and west, including Kilkenny Farm off Burford Road, land west access from Alvescot Road and Upavon Way, plus proposals near the B4020 corridor. New supply can alter lender comparables used in valuation reports depending on unit type and phase release dates. Our advisers and panel valuers keep an eye on those local comparables so your case is built on current evidence, not old assumptions.
Post-redemption LTV is simple maths, but it drives your options. Add current mortgage balance, add Target repayment sum from the Red Book valuation, add any financed product fee. Then divide by current property value. That gives the new LTV used for pricing and lender limits. In many Carterton cases, LTV improves versus day-one purchase because the home has appreciated since completion.
Use the earlier example. Current mortgage £212,000 plus redemption £70,875.20 creates £282,875.20 before fees. Against a value of £354,376, LTV is roughly 79.8%. That can be stronger than the original purchase profile for a Help to Buy borrower, and it may open more lenders and better product tiers, subject to status. The same approach works for higher-value homes near Brize Meadow and lower-value flats where homedata.co.uk puts average flat sold prices at £169,500.
Affordability is the second gate. Lenders stress test the full new loan amount, not just the extra borrowing element, so income evidence must be complete from the start. We review payslips, contract terms and committed outgoings before application, then select lenders whose policy fits your profile. If an early repayment charge applies on your existing mortgage, we run side-by-side costings so you can see break-even timing in pounds, not guesses.
One more Carterton point. Some homes near Shill Brook and Willow Meadows sit in areas described as wet or marshy, and valuer commentary can differ on certain properties. That does not block a remortgage by default, but it can affect pace and lender appetite on a case-by-case basis. Experienced packaging and realistic timelines help avoid last-minute surprises.
No. Policy varies a lot between lenders, even when headline rates look similar. Some lenders accept capital raising for Target HCA redemption as standard, while others place tighter limits on LTV bands, valuation age, or legal process. Our whole-of-market brokers filter for HTB-friendly lenders before full application so your Carterton case is placed with a lender that can actually complete it.
Yes. Target HCA requires a RICS Red Book valuation for the redemption process, and the report has to meet specific format and timing requirements. Estate agent estimates are not accepted for this purpose. In Carterton, getting that report lined up early can keep your offer and redemption dates in sync.
Most cases run for several weeks rather than a few days because lender underwriting and Target authority must align. Timing depends on valuation booking speed, lender turnaround and solicitor readiness with portal documents. We manage the chain from AIP to completion so owners in OX18 avoid avoidable delays.
Yes, partial repayment is possible and is often called staircasing. It can reduce future HTB fees, but it does not remove the scheme entirely, and you may repeat valuation and legal work later when redeeming the rest. We can compare full redemption against partial repayment using your Carterton figures and expected time in the property.
You may have an early repayment charge if you exit before the fixed term ends. That charge can still be worth paying if HTB fees and future mortgage costs make early action cheaper overall, but it needs proper calculation. Our advisers run the numbers with your exact ERC, likely new payment, and projected HTB fee path.
It is based on a percentage of your home’s current market value, not your original loan cash amount. So if you borrowed 20% originally, you repay 20% of today’s value shown in the accepted Red Book report. With homedata.co.uk showing Carterton sold price growth in recent periods, this is often higher than owners expect.
Often yes for product fees, depending on lender policy and LTV limits. Legal and valuation costs are sometimes paid separately, though some products include legal packages. We present the total funding picture at recommendation stage so you can choose between lower upfront spend and lower long-term interest.
No, this page is about the Help to Buy equity loan redemption process only. ISA and Lifetime ISA products are separate schemes with different rules and timelines. Our Carterton team will keep your advice strictly on equity-loan repayment and remortgage planning.
Free initial consult
End-to-end support for equity loan management, redemption planning and case coordination.
From £X
Book the right RICS Red Book valuation format for Target HCA redemption use.
From £X
Work with solicitors who regularly submit Target redemption applications.
Free initial consult
Compare remortgage options across lenders based on your new post-redemption LTV.
Free initial consult
Our whole-of-market brokers place complex borrowing cases with suitable lenders.
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Remortgage to clear your equity loan, with our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers managing the full process.
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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.