Clear the equity loan with a local remortgage adviser








Great Yarmouth Help to Buy borrowers often hit the same point after year 5, the equity loan starts charging, the monthly bill rises, and the old numbers no longer sit comfortably. Our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers work on remortgages that clear the loan rather than force a sale, with whole-of-market checks and case management from Red Book valuation through to Target HCA redemption. We deal with the lender questions, the solicitor handover and the paperwork in between, so the case keeps moving.
The local numbers matter. homedata.co.uk records an average Great Yarmouth house price of £214,082, with properties currently selling at an average of £262,677, while home.co.uk shows 629 sold homes over the last year. That gap can change the redemption sum in a big way, especially in Southtown Road, North Quay and the newer plots at Bluebell Meadow in Bradwell. Oswald House at 284-285 Southtown Road is another reminder that the borough keeps changing, and the valuation day figure is what drives the mortgage size.

£214,082
Average House Price
£262,677
Current Sold Price Average
£204,000
Average Mortgage Purchase Price
0.3%
12-Month Price Change
-4%
Asking Price Change (6 Months)
629
Sold Properties Last Year
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Most Great Yarmouth borrowers clear Help to Buy by moving onto a bigger remortgage that covers the existing mortgage balance and the equity-loan redemption together. That route matters on homes around Great Yarmouth Market Place, Hall Quay, King Street and the seafront, because the valuation day figure decides how much Target HCA wants back. A loan that sat quietly during the 0% period can become expensive once year 6 begins, so the timing can change the whole case. We see the same pattern on newer homes at Mulberry Park in Caister-on-Sea, Bluebell Meadow in Bradwell and Bowlers Green in Hopton-on-Sea.
Take a simple local example. Suppose you bought at £204,000 with a 20% equity loan, and your current valuation comes in at Great Yarmouth's average house price of £214,082. The redemption figure would be £42,816.40 before legal and lender fees, because the repayment is linked to current value, not the original purchase price. Add a mortgage balance of £150,000 and the new borrowing target lands around £192,816.40, which is why our brokers check the figures before anyone commits to a product.
The same 20% share on a home worth the current sold average of £262,677 would be £52,535.40, so the valuation can move the loan amount by a sizeable margin. Lenders then test affordability on the higher borrowing, not the old balance, and Great Yarmouth's average household income of £32,912 means that calculation has to be done properly. The borough's employment rate of 50.1% also explains why some cases need a longer term or a lower fee structure to pass the lender's checks. Our team compares the new mortgage cost against the Help to Buy charge, then looks at ERCs on your existing mortgage before we say the numbers work.
Help to Buy interest is 0% in years 1-5, 1.75% in year 6, then RPI+1% plus £1/month after that.
Not every lender accepts a remortgage plus Help to Buy redemption in one case, even though many do. Our whole-of-market brokers filter for lenders that are comfortable with Target HCA paperwork and the loan repayment figure, then cut out the names that would make the case stall. That matters on older homes near St Nicholas and Northgate Street, or on a terrace off Prince's Road where the valuation and the borrowing need to line up closely.
The wrong lender can leave you short of funds or force a second application later. We check whether the new borrowing covers the current mortgage balance, the equity-loan redemption and any product fee in one move, then compare the post-redemption LTV against the current value. A flat in Camperdown, a house on South Quay or a new-build on Bluebell Meadow will not all sit in the same lending box, so the filter has to be specific.
Great Yarmouth is not a one-size-fits-all market. The borough has 431 listed buildings, including 13 Grade I, 47 Grade II* and 371 Grade II entries, and the older stock around North Quay shows how varied the local housing mix can be. Numbers 55, 56 and 57 on North Quay are 16th-century merchant's houses, while the Fishermen's Hospital dates from 1702 with Dutch gables and red brick. Those details matter because older fabric can trigger more lender questions, and a mortgage adviser has to read the case with that in mind.
The ground conditions matter too. Great Yarmouth sits on a spit between the Broadland marshes and the North Sea, with clay deposits inland and a flood warning area along the seafront from Salisbury Road to the Pleasure Beach. Damp, roof wear, drainage issues and shrink-swell movement can all come up on valuation or survey notes, especially in the conservation areas at Great Yarmouth Market Place, Hall Quay and South Quay. A lender may still lend, but the paperwork can take a little more steering when the property sits in a historic street or near the flood plain.
That does not rule the case out. It just means the valuation, the mortgage offer and the solicitor's work all need to line up cleanly. Homes in King Street, St Georges or Prince's Road can still remortgage well if the figures stack up, and the same is true for newer homes in Bradwell or Caister-on-Sea. The key point is simple, the post-redemption borrowing has to fit the property as it stands today, not the way it looked when the Help to Buy loan started.
We start with the original purchase price, your remaining mortgage balance, your Help to Buy percentage and the date you want the case to complete. For homes near North Quay, Bluebell Meadow or Oswald House on Southtown Road, we also note whether the property is a flat, terrace or newer house, because lender appetite can change with the property type.
We run an AIP against the size of borrowing needed to clear both the mortgage and the equity loan. This is where we check whether the lender is happy with the full figure, not just the current mortgage balance, so there are no surprises later on.
A RICS surveyor carries out the valuation Target HCA accepts. The number fixes the redemption sum, and it can shift the post-redemption LTV on the new mortgage, which is why the valuation date matters so much.
Once the figures stack up, we submit the full mortgage application and the lender asks for standard evidence such as income, bank statements and ID. If the home sits in Great Yarmouth Market Place, Hall Quay or near the seafront, the lender may want more detail on the property condition.
The lender issues an offer based on the new borrowing, the valuation and the affordability check. Our brokers read the offer line by line so the redemption sum, any product fee and the repayment term all sit inside the numbers.
Your HTB solicitor files the Redemption Application through Target's portal, then lines up the legal work so the lender funds and Target gets paid on completion day. Homes in Caister-on-Sea, Bradwell or Hopton-on-Sea follow the same scheme process, even if the property type changes.
On completion day, the new lender's funds clear the old mortgage and redeem the equity loan. After that, you only owe the mortgage, and the monthly Help to Buy charge stops.
The Red Book valuation drives the Target HCA redemption figure, so we usually want that booked before the AIP goes in. That way the lender sizes the mortgage against a real repayment amount, not a guess based on a house on Hall Quay, a terrace off King Street or a new build at Bowlers Green.
Local price movement can push the redemption sum up faster than owners expect. If a Great Yarmouth home bought at £204,000 is now worth £262,677, a 20% equity share rises from £40,800 to £52,535.40, which is an extra £11,735.40 before any fees. That difference is real money when the case is being sized around South Quay, the Market Place or a newer home in Caister-on-Sea.
Post-redemption LTV is the next piece of the puzzle. A borrower with a £140,000 mortgage balance and a £52,535.40 redemption figure would need about £192,535.40 plus fees, which is roughly 73% LTV against £262,677. Against a £214,082 valuation, the same debt sits nearer 89.9% LTV, and that can move you into a different pricing band. Our whole-of-market brokers look at the valuation first, then test the borrowing against the actual property value rather than the figure you paid years ago.
Affordability still has to pass. Great Yarmouth's average household income is £32,912, and the borough's employment rate sits at 50.1%, so lenders can ask for a clean set of bank statements, payslips and a sensible term length. Flood risk on Salisbury Road to the Pleasure Beach, plus older construction in the Rows near North Quay, can also affect the lender's reading of the case. The point is not to overcomplicate it, just to get the valuation, borrowing and legal work pointed in the same direction.
The new mortgage covers the current mortgage balance, the Help to Buy redemption and any fees that the lender agrees to include. That total is then compared with the property's current value to see the post-redemption LTV, which is usually better than the original purchase-day loan because the home has gone up in value. On a property near Great Yarmouth Market Place or South Quay, that shift can make a real difference to the products available.
Great Yarmouth has a wide spread of homes, from the 16th-century merchant houses on North Quay to the newer plots at Mulberry Park in Caister-on-Sea, so the right lending box depends on the address and the structure. Detached homes sit at £315,000, semi-detached homes at £213,000, terraces at £167,000 and flats at £104,000 according to homedata.co.uk, which gives a clue to how much the borrowing can change from one street to another. Our brokers line up the mortgage size with the property type, the equity-loan figure and the completion-day costs, then keep the case moving with the solicitor.
Waiting for the Help to Buy charge to grow is rarely the clean answer. The scheme starts at 0% in years 1-5, moves to 1.75% in year 6, then switches to RPI+1% plus £1/month, so the cost can rise even if the wider market is quiet. A borrower in Gorleston-on-Sea or Bradwell does not need to guess at the future charge, because the repayment formula is already baked in. That is why many owners decide to clear the loan before the bills climb further.
The newer developments around the borough give a good example of why timing matters. Bluebell Meadow in Bradwell, Bowlers Green in Hopton-on-Sea and Mulberry Park in Caister-on-Sea all sit inside a market where the property value can move, and the redemption figure moves with it. A lender will still test affordability on the new loan, but the home's current worth may help the LTV more than the owner expected when they bought the plot. That is especially relevant if the original purchase was a flat at £104,000 or a terrace at £167,000.
Our advice is direct. Compare the cost of clearing the loan now with the cost of leaving it in place for another year or two, then factor in ERCs on your current mortgage if you are still inside a fixed deal. The Great Yarmouth market has shown a 0.3% annual increase in house prices, but asking prices have changed by -4% over the last 6 months, so the local picture is not flat. Those mixed signals are exactly why a whole-of-market search matters before you pick a product.
No. Some lenders will not combine the remortgage with the equity-loan repayment, and others cap how much extra can be borrowed. Our whole-of-market brokers compare lenders that are comfortable with Target HCA paperwork, then narrow the list to the ones that fit your figures in Great Yarmouth.
Yes. Target HCA wants a RICS Red Book valuation, not a desktop estimate. In Great Yarmouth that can matter on older homes near North Quay, the Market Place or Salisbury Road, where condition and flood exposure can affect the number the surveyor gives.
Straightforward cases can move in a few weeks, but the valuation, mortgage offer and solicitor stage each have their own timings. Properties in conservation areas such as Hall Quay or St Nicholas and Northgate Street can take longer if the lender wants more detail on the fabric or the paperwork.
Yes. That is called staircasing, and it means buying back part of the equity share rather than clearing the full amount now. It can suit owners in Bluebell Meadow or Mulberry Park who want to reduce the loan first and deal with the rest later.
You may face an Early Repayment Charge if you remortgage before the fix ends. Our brokers compare that charge against the saving from clearing the Help to Buy loan, then show you the net position so you can judge whether moving now still makes sense.
Yes, but the property can need a closer look. Great Yarmouth has 431 listed buildings and conservation areas such as Great Yarmouth Market Place and King Street, so a lender may ask more questions if the home is historic, altered or on clay soil inland from the seafront.
Yes. The solicitor has to file the Redemption Application through Target's portal and handle the legal work around completion. A standard conveyancer can miss the scheme-specific steps, which can slow the case down on homes from Southtown Road to Caister-on-Sea.
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Advice for existing equity-loan owners in Great Yarmouth who want to clear the scheme or review the next step.
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RICS Red Book valuation support for Target HCA redemption cases.
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Legal support for the Redemption Application and completion-day paperwork.
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Whole-of-market remortgage advice for Great Yarmouth homeowners.
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Local mortgage broker support for standard and specialist 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.