Remortgage your current loan and clear your Help to Buy equity loan in one move








HTB redemption gets expensive in year 6. Our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers help Exeter owners remortgage onto a larger mortgage that clears the Help to Buy equity loan and leaves just one mortgage payment to manage. We compare deals across HTB-friendly lenders, we know the Target HCA process, and we case-manage the moving parts from the RICS Red Book valuation through to solicitor completion. The first chat is free. In standard cases we are paid a procuration fee by the lender on completion, though some specialist HTB cases can carry a flat advice fee and we tell you that upfront.
For Exeter, the local numbers matter because your repayment is based on today’s value, not the amount you borrowed on day one. home.co.uk shows an average asking price of £378,790 in May 2026, while homedata.co.uk records an average sold price of £336,000 across the Exeter postcode area between April 2025 and March 2026. That same homedata.co.uk period shows prices down 4%, equal to £15,000, and 7,100 sales in total, with 209 new-build sales making up 3.0%. Where our research uses postcode-area data rather than a tight city-boundary cut, we flag that, because Exeter HTB cases still have to be sized to the actual property and the actual valuation.

£378,790
Average Asking Price, May 2026
£336,000
Average Sold Price, Apr 2025 to Mar 2026
-4% (£15,000)
12-Month Sold Price Change
7,100
Sales in Last 12 Months
209 sales (3.0%)
New-Build Sales Share
£67,200
Typical HTB Loan on £336,000 at 20%
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Most Exeter HTB owners do not sell to repay the equity loan. They refinance it. That usually means one new mortgage which covers your current mortgage balance, the Help to Buy redemption amount, and sometimes any product fee or legal cost that you choose to add. In practical terms, an owner in EX1, EX2 or EX4 is asking the new lender to replace two debts with one, and the lender then checks affordability and loan to value on the full figure.
Here is a simple Exeter-style example using local numbers. Say you bought with Help to Buy and your home is now valued at £336,000, which matches the average sold price recorded by homedata.co.uk for the Exeter postcode area between April 2025 and March 2026. If your Help to Buy share is 20%, the redemption amount is £67,200. Now add a current mortgage balance of £182,000 and a product fee of £999, and the new mortgage needed becomes £250,199.
That matters because affordability and loan to value can look better than owners expect. On the numbers above, £250,199 against a £336,000 valuation gives a post-redemption LTV of 74.46%. Many people assume redeeming the equity loan will push them into weak pricing, but a higher current value can pull the LTV back down. The lender still stress-tests income, credit profile and outgoings, though. So the right sequence is to price the redemption, then check how the new mortgage stacks up.
Illustrative example only. HTB figures use a £67,200 equity loan, based on 20% of £336,000 from homedata.co.uk sold-price data for the Exeter postcode area. Mortgage interest example uses 5.00% for comparison only and is not a quote.
Not every lender will take a remortgage case that includes Help to Buy redemption. Some accept it only where the solicitor paperwork is in order and the valuation wording matches Target HCA requirements. Some will cap how much fee can be added. Others will want the redemption figure confirmed before they issue the final offer. That is where specialist familiarity helps.
Our whole-of-market brokers screen the market for lenders that are active on HTB redemption cases in Exeter. We look at lender criteria, your likely post-redemption LTV, your income position, and any timing issue around an existing fixed rate. For owners in the EX postcode area, that can save a lot of false starts. A lender with a sharp headline rate is no use if it does not like equity-loan redemptions or if the case misses the Target HCA deadline window.
We start with your current mortgage balance, income, credit position, property type and the share owned by Help to Buy. For Exeter cases we also ask what postcode district the property sits in, such as EX1, EX2 or EX4, because lender appetite can differ by property type and value band.
Our broker tests likely borrowing with lenders that are open to HTB redemption cases. This is not the last word, but it tells you whether the new mortgage range looks realistic before full costs are incurred.
A RICS surveyor provides the Red Book valuation that Target HCA will accept. That figure sets the equity-loan repayment number, so it drives the whole case.
Once the valuation and lender fit look right, we submit the full application. The lender then underwrites income, credit, bank statements, property details and the redemption structure.
The offer needs to cover the current mortgage balance, the Help to Buy redemption amount and any agreed fees. Timing matters here because the valuation validity and the Target HCA process need to line up.
Your solicitor handles the legal side and files the Redemption Application through Target’s portal. In HTB cases, a solicitor who already knows the format and the completion-day money flow can stop avoidable delays.
On completion day the old mortgage is repaid, the Help to Buy amount is sent across, and the charge is removed once processed. After that, you are left with one mortgage and no further Help to Buy interest charges.
Try to get the Red Book valuation moving before the case reaches full application stage. The valuation fixes the Help to Buy repayment figure, and the lender needs that number to size the mortgage properly. In Exeter cases where the property value is close to a key LTV cut-off, a small change in valuation can alter which products are available.
Exeter owners need to separate postcode-area market data from the value of the exact flat or house they own. Local detail varies by exact address, so we work from your property rather than a town-wide figure. Those numbers help frame the case, but Target HCA will still go off the individual Red Book valuation on your property.
One useful angle for 2026 is the 4% annual sold-price fall, equal to £15,000, recorded by homedata.co.uk across the Exeter postcode area. For some year-6 and year-7 owners, that dip may mean the redemption sum is a touch lower than it would have been last year. It does not wipe out longer-term growth if you bought earlier in the scheme, but it can take the edge off the figure today. That is worth checking before another yearly HTB interest increase lands.
LTV is the next pinch point. Using the local £336,000 sold-price figure as a rough anchor, a full 20% Help to Buy share points to a repayment of £67,200. If your remaining mortgage balance is around £170,000 to £190,000, your new loan could still sit in a workable range once the equity loan is folded in. Income then decides the deal. A household that could borrow enough for the original HTB purchase in EX2 or EX4 may still pass now, but only after the lender has stress-tested the larger balance against today’s rates and outgoings.
Sales volume gives another clue. homedata.co.uk records 7,100 sales in the Exeter postcode area over the last 12 months, down 15.9% or 1,600 transactions. Fewer sales can mean thinner valuation comparables in some pockets, especially where a block has not seen many recent completions. That does not stop a redemption. It just means valuation quality matters more, and the wording needs to be clean enough for both the lender and Target HCA.
The new mortgage is normally bigger than your current one. No surprise there. It has to absorb the Help to Buy repayment and, in some cases, a fee. Yet the ratio that lenders care about is not just the balance. It is the balance against the current property value.
Take the Exeter average sold price of £336,000 as a working example. A homeowner with a current mortgage of £182,000 and a Help to Buy redemption figure of £67,200 would need £249,200 before fees, or £250,199 with a £999 fee added. On that figure the LTV is 74.17% before the fee, or 74.46% with it added. That can open more lender options than many owners expect, particularly if their original purchase was at a much higher LTV.
Affordability is a separate gate. A lender may like the LTV and still trim borrowing if childcare, car finance or other commitments have changed since the home was bought. Fixed-rate timing can bite too. If your current mortgage is still inside its fixed period, any Early Repayment Charge has to be weighed against the saving from getting rid of future HTB interest rises. Our advisers model that before you commit.
Small details can move the answer. A flat in EX1 with service charges, a house in EX4 with a straightforward title, or a new-build resale in the wider EX postcode area can each land differently with lenders. That is why we do not treat HTB redemption as a generic remortgage. We place it as a specialist case with a clear repayment route from offer to completion.
Criteria is the real hurdle. One lender may accept Help to Buy redemption on a standard remortgage. Another may decline the same case because the solicitor is not ready to work through Target HCA, or because the valuation is missing the right basis. In a market where home.co.uk shows average asking prices at £378,790 for Exeter in May 2026, even a modest valuation shift can move the case between product bands.
Paperwork is another. Target HCA wants the correct valuation, the correct forms and the correct money movement on completion day. Lenders want the offer aligned to the redemption figure. Solicitors want enough time to get authority to complete. Those parts meet in one case file, and if any bit lags, the remortgage can drift.
Our brokers and case managers work around that joined-up process. We speak to lenders that are known to handle HTB redemptions, we keep the valuation and legal timetable in view, and we flag upfront where an existing product fee, service charge or ERC changes the maths. For an Exeter owner trying to stop year-6 interest from turning into year-7 interest, that joined-up handling is often the difference between a clean redemption and a long delay.
No. Some lenders are happy with remortgage plus Help to Buy redemption in one loan, and some are not. Others will accept it only where the valuation, solicitor route and redemption paperwork all fit their criteria. Our whole-of-market brokers filter for lenders that are open to these cases before you waste time on the wrong application.
Yes, in most cases you need a RICS Red Book valuation that Target HCA will accept. The valuation is central because your repayment is based on the current market value of the property, not the original amount borrowed. It also gives the lender a figure to work from when sizing the new mortgage.
It depends on valuation booking times, lender underwriting speed and how quickly the solicitor can progress the Target HCA portal work. Many cases run over several weeks rather than several days. A clean case with prompt documents moves faster, but HTB redemption is usually slower than a plain remortgage because there is an extra party involved.
Yes, part redemption is possible and is often called staircasing in day-to-day conversation. You would still need the correct valuation and legal process, and you would still keep an equity-loan balance afterwards. That means future charges continue on the remaining share, so we compare part redemption against clearing the whole balance.
You may have an Early Repayment Charge if you remortgage before the fixed period ends. That does not always mean you should wait. Our broker calculates the ERC against the cost of staying in Help to Buy, including the year-6 interest charge, later annual increases and the £1 monthly management fee, so you can compare both paths properly.
Not always. Your monthly payment can rise because you are borrowing more on the mortgage, even though you are removing the equity loan. The key comparison is not only the next month’s payment, but the longer run cost of leaving the Help to Buy loan in place as interest and fees keep building.
It is a percentage of the property’s current market value. So if your equity loan is 20% and the Red Book valuation comes in at £336,000, the redemption figure is £67,200. That is why owners who borrowed much less in cash terms at purchase can still face a bigger repayment later.
Yes, many owners do. Savings can be used to cover part of the equity-loan repayment, fees or legal costs, which lowers the mortgage balance and may improve affordability or LTV. We look at both versions, with and without cash contribution, to see which route works best.
It can be, but only if your own property value has moved in the same direction. The 4% decline, equal to £15,000, is a postcode-area sold-price figure from homedata.co.uk for April 2025 to March 2026. Your actual repayment will be based on the Red Book valuation of your specific home, not the area average.
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Advice and support for Exeter Help to Buy owners dealing with redemption, staircasing and paperwork
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Find the valuation route needed for a Target HCA redemption case in Exeter
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Solicitor support for Target HCA forms, redemption statements and completion handling
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Whole-of-market mortgage advice for remortgages, product transfers and purchase cases
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Speak to a whole-of-market broker about affordability, LTV and lender criteria
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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.