Remortgage your existing loan and clear your Help to Buy equity loan with our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers.








Year 6 is when many Help to Buy owners in Formby start looking at the numbers. The equity loan that felt cheap in years 1 to 5 starts charging 1.75%, plus the £1 monthly management fee, and the bill keeps rising after that. Our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers compare deals across HTB-friendly lenders, then manage the case from the Red Book valuation through to the solicitor’s redemption paperwork with Target HCA. That matters in Formby, where values around L37 can shift the repayment figure by thousands.
We handle the full remortgage-and-redeem process for homes across Formby, including newer estates off Andrews Lane and Brackenway, and older housing in Freshfield near Green Lane Conservation Area. Not every lender is happy with Help to Buy redemption borrowing in one application, and not every solicitor is quick with Target’s portal. Our whole-of-market brokers filter for lenders that fit the case, check whether any early repayment charge on your current mortgage still makes the move worthwhile, and keep the money flow lined up for completion day.

£361,666
Average sold price
£486,769
Detached average sold price
£309,867
Semi-detached average sold price
£220,000
Terraced average sold price
£180,742
Flat average sold price
£8,896
12-month cash price change
2.27%
12-month percentage change
282
Residential sales in last 12 months
£65,999
Example 20% HTB loan on The Dunes entry price
£87,999
Example 20% HTB loan on Pinewood Park entry price
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Most Help to Buy owners in Formby clear the equity loan by replacing their current mortgage with a larger one. The new mortgage usually covers the remaining mortgage balance, the Help to Buy redemption amount, and any product or legal fees. For a home in L37, that is often cleaner than keeping the equity loan in place once the year 6 charge has started. Our advisers build the case around the lender’s affordability rules and the valuation figure accepted by Target HCA.
Here is a simple Formby-style example using local pricing. Say you bought a new build at The Dunes off Andrews Lane at the entry price of £329,995 with a 20% Help to Buy equity loan of £65,999. If the home is now valued at Formby’s current average sold price of £361,666, the equity loan redemption figure is 20% of today’s value, not the original loan cash amount, so the figure becomes £72,333.20. That is £6,334.20 more than the day-one loan because Help to Buy shares in the price movement.
Now add the main mortgage. If your current balance has reduced to £225,000 and your new lender charges a £999 product fee added to the loan, the total borrowing needed becomes £298,332.20. Against a current value of £361,666, that works out at an 82.49% loan to value. In many Formby cases that still opens up more lender choice than owners expect, especially where the property has risen since purchase.
Illustration using Help to Buy charging rules and a Formby average sold price of £361,666 from homedata.co.uk. Equity loan example assumes a 20% share, so £72,333.20 redeemed in year 6.
Not every remortgage lender wants Help to Buy redemption cases, and some will cap the loan to value or tighten affordability where the case includes Target HCA repayment. That is why our whole-of-market brokers do the filtering before a full application goes in. On Formby homes around West Lane, Andrews Lane and Brackenway, we look at the property type, current value, remaining mortgage balance and redemption figure before recommending a route.
Specialist familiarity matters because the lender needs clean paperwork. The case normally needs a Red Book RICS valuation accepted by Target HCA, a solicitor who can submit the Redemption Application through Target’s portal, and a mortgage offer that releases enough money on completion. Around Freshfield, where some homes sit near Green Lane Conservation Area and the stock ranges from 1960s semis to older brick and stone property, having the right lender from the start can save weeks.
We start with the current mortgage balance, estimated Formby value, household income, credit position and any early repayment charge on your present deal.
Our broker checks which HTB-friendly lenders may work before you spend more money, using the likely numbers for your L37 home.
You instruct a RICS Red Book valuation that Target HCA will accept. This is the figure that drives the Help to Buy repayment amount.
Once the valuation and redemption figures are lined up, we submit the full remortgage case with the chosen lender.
The lender confirms the final loan amount, including the sum needed to clear the Help to Buy loan and any approved fee added to borrowing.
Your solicitor submits the Redemption Application, obtains authority to complete and co-ordinates the dates and funds.
On completion day the new lender’s funds repay the old mortgage and clear Target HCA, leaving you with one mortgage and no Help to Buy equity loan.
In Formby cases, book the Red Book valuation before or alongside the Agreement in Principle, not at the very end. The lender needs the real Help to Buy repayment figure to size the mortgage properly, and the figure can move sharply where values in L37 have risen. A home bought at £329,995 that now values at £361,666 produces a £72,333.20 redemption figure, not the original £65,999 loan.
Formby is not a one-shape housing market. Newer sites such as The Dunes off Andrews Lane and Pinewood Park sit beside older housing in Freshfield and around Green Lane Conservation Area, where construction can be brick, stone, timber-framed core or later cavity wall depending on the age of the building. For Help to Buy redemption, the key point is simple, the equity loan tracks today’s valuation. In an area where homedata.co.uk shows an average sold price of £361,666, that can push the repayment figure above the cash amount first borrowed.
Price movement is one part of the story. homedata.co.uk records a cash increase of £8,896 over the last 12 months, equal to 2.27%, but it also shows a separate 12-month percentage figure of -21.0%. We treat that as a data discrepancy and size cases from the actual valuation, not a headline trend line. That matters on roads such as West Lane and Brackenway because the lender and Target HCA both work off the accepted Red Book figure on your own property.
Transaction volume also matters for valuations. homedata.co.uk shows 282 residential sales in the last 12 months, while another annual count appears as 269, so again there is a small source discrepancy inside the sold-data set. In practice, a surveyor valuing a Formby home will focus on recent comparables from the same patch, with closer evidence from L37 usually carrying more weight than a broad Merseyside average. We flag that early if the property is in a micro-market such as Freshfield, where detached stock can sit apart from the rest of Formby.
Local conditions can affect lender appetite as well. Formby is a low-lying area with a nationally significant surface water flood risk area and around 3,024 residential properties identified as at risk, with 22% of those classed as high risk. There were reports of sewer flooding in August 2020 and widespread surface water flooding during Storm Christoph in January 2021. A lender may still lend, but the valuation comments, insurance position and postcode-level risk checks need to line up.
The construction mix in Formby can also shape the valuation and legal work. Some of the oldest cottages date back to the 16th century and have a timber-framed core later encased in brick, while St Peter’s Church and Formby Hall show how long-established brick and stone construction runs through the area. Help to Buy properties are usually newer, but owners remortgaging from estates near Andrews Lane or Brackenway can still find that nearby older stock changes comparable evidence. This is another reason we use advisers who know how HTB cases are underwritten rather than sending a generic remortgage application.
A lot of Formby owners assume redeeming Help to Buy will push the loan to value too high. Often the opposite happens. Because the property is now worth more than it was at purchase, your post-redemption LTV can be lower than the original combined debt looked on day one, even after you add the equity-loan repayment. Using the Formby average of £361,666, a total new mortgage of £298,332.20 gives an LTV of 82.49%.
Affordability is the other side of the test. The lender will assess the larger mortgage payment against income, existing credit commitments and household costs, then apply its own stress test. On a higher-value detached part of the Formby market, where homedata.co.uk shows an average of £486,769, the loan size can move up quickly if the old HTB share was taken on a pricier new build. On a flat at £180,742 or a terrace at £220,000, the numbers can be more forgiving, but lender policy still matters.
We also check fixed-rate timing. Plenty of owners around Pinewood Park and newer plots off Andrews Lane are still inside an initial fix, so an early repayment charge may apply if they remortgage now. Our brokers run the saving calculation against the HTB interest path, the £1 monthly fee and the cost of waiting. Sometimes redeeming now is the cheaper move. Sometimes it is smarter to line the case up for the end of the fixed period.
No. Some lenders are comfortable with remortgage borrowing that clears a Help to Buy equity loan in one go, while others are more limited on loan to value, property type or solicitor process. Our whole-of-market advisers narrow the shortlist to lenders that fit HTB redemption cases in places like Formby, Freshfield and the Andrews Lane developments.
Yes. Target HCA needs a RICS Red Book valuation for the redemption process, and the lender also needs a reliable figure for the new mortgage. This is not the same thing as a standard estate agency opinion. In Formby, where values can vary between flats at £180,742 and detached homes at £486,769 according to homedata.co.uk, the correct valuation is central to the case.
Many cases take several weeks rather than several days because there are more moving parts than a normal remortgage. You need the valuation, the mortgage offer and the solicitor’s Target HCA paperwork all lined up. If the property is in a part of Formby with extra underwriting questions, such as around surface water risk near the River Alt catchment, it can take longer.
Yes, in many cases you can repay part of the equity loan rather than all of it, subject to scheme rules at the time and the required process. Owners sometimes do this to reduce the future interest bill while keeping the main remortgage smaller. We will compare that against a full redemption so you can see the trade-off in black and white.
You may have an early repayment charge if you remortgage before the fixed period ends. We calculate that against the cost of leaving the Help to Buy loan in place, including the 1.75% year 6 charge, the later index-linked increases and the £1 monthly fee. Around Formby, where the equity loan share can be large on homes priced from £329,995 to £509,995 at The Dunes, that calculation is worth doing properly.
It is based on the property’s current market value because the equity loan is a percentage share, not a fixed cash debt. So a 20% loan remains a 20% share at redemption. On a Formby example, a home bought at £329,995 with a £65,999 HTB loan would require £72,333.20 to redeem if the accepted valuation is £361,666.
Not automatically, but it can affect lender choice, valuation comments and insurance checks. Formby has a known surface water flood risk profile, with around 3,024 residential properties identified as at risk and notable events recorded in August 2020 and January 2021. Our brokers factor that in at the lender-selection stage rather than discovering a problem after application.
You can if that firm still handles Help to Buy redemptions and is set up for the Target HCA portal, but many owners switch to a solicitor that does this work regularly. The legal side is not just a standard remortgage. The solicitor has to co-ordinate the authority to complete and the payment to Target on the same completion path.
No. A Level 2 or Level 3 survey looks at condition, while the Red Book valuation is for market value. In Formby, survey costs often vary with property type, with a Level 2 around £450-£650 for homes near the £360,000 mark and more for older or unusual buildings near Green Lane Conservation Area, but that is separate from the valuation needed for Target HCA.
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Remortgage your existing loan and clear your Help to Buy equity loan with our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers.
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