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








Post-year-5 Help to Buy charges catch plenty of owners in Morecambe off guard. Our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers help you remortgage to clear the equity loan, with whole-of-market access and end-to-end case management that covers the Red Book valuation, lender fit, solicitor handover and Target HCA redemption steps. This is not a standard remortgage. The mortgage has to be sized around your current mortgage balance, the Help to Buy repayment amount and any fees, all against the current value of your Morecambe home.
Across Morecambe, the practical issue is simple. Your Help to Buy loan is no longer sitting quietly in the background once year 6 starts. The 0% interest period has ended, the £1 monthly management fee still applies, and the percentage-based equity loan means the repayment figure rises if your Morecambe property value has risen as well. Our whole-of-market brokers compare deals across HTB-friendly lenders and keep the case moving from first figures to completion.

£218,016
Average asking price, home.co.uk
£222,107
Current average listing price, home.co.uk
-0.43%
Asking price change over 6 months, home.co.uk
£281,286
Detached asking price, home.co.uk
£65,000
Flat asking price, home.co.uk
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Most Help to Buy owners in Morecambe clear the loan by taking a larger remortgage. The new mortgage usually covers your current mortgage balance, the equity-loan redemption amount and any product or legal fees. That matters in Morecambe because your repayment to Target HCA is based on a percentage of the home’s current value, not the cash amount you borrowed years ago. In plain terms, if the property has gone up, the amount needed to clear the loan goes up too.
Here is a straight example using the current Morecambe average asking price of £218,016 from home.co.uk. A 20% Help to Buy equity loan against a value of £218,016 would mean a redemption figure of £43,603.20, before any admin and legal costs. If your remaining main mortgage balance were £120,000, the replacement mortgage would need to cover £163,603.20 plus any lender fee added to the loan. The exact mortgage figure changes with your own balance, but that structure is how most Morecambe redemption cases are built.
There is another angle in Morecambe that often works in your favour. Even if the mortgage gets bigger in cash terms, your loan to value can still improve after redemption because the property is now worth more than it was when you bought it under Help to Buy. A lower post-redemption LTV opens more lender options. That is why our brokers check the numbers both ways, not just whether you can clear the loan, but whether the new Morecambe mortgage sits inside a sharper LTV band.
Illustration using a 20% equity loan against £218,016 in Morecambe. Help to Buy charging structure: 0% years 1 to 5, 1.75% from year 6, inflation-linked increases after that, plus £1 per month management fee.
Not every lender is comfortable with Help to Buy redemption cases in Morecambe. Some accept remortgage borrowing that includes the equity-loan repayment. Some are stricter on loan to value, income multiples or the timing of the Target HCA paperwork. Our whole-of-market brokers filter that lender list before you waste time on an application that was never right for an HTB redemption in Lancaster district.
Timing matters here. A lender may want the Red Book valuation in place before full underwriting, because that valuation fixes the percentage-based repayment figure for your Morecambe property. The solicitor also has to line up the mortgage funds and the Target HCA redemption statement so the money flow works on completion day. This is why lender choice and HTB process knowledge sit side by side.
We start with your current mortgage balance, estimated Morecambe property value, income, outgoings and whether your existing mortgage has an early repayment charge.
Our brokers test lender appetite for an HTB redemption case in Morecambe and check what borrowing range looks realistic before full application costs land.
You book a RICS Red Book valuation accepted by Target HCA, because the Help to Buy repayment is based on the current value of the Morecambe property.
Once the valuation figure is in, we package the remortgage with the Help to Buy redemption amount, the mortgage balance and any agreed fees.
The lender issues a formal offer if the Morecambe case fits its policy, valuation and affordability checks.
Your solicitor handles the Target HCA redemption application, authority to complete and completion statement so the money reaches the right place.
The old mortgage is repaid, the Help to Buy loan is redeemed and your Morecambe property moves onto the new mortgage alone.
In Morecambe, the Red Book valuation is not just a formality. It sets the Help to Buy repayment figure that the lender must work around. Get that booked before or alongside the Agreement in Principle stage if you can, so our brokers are sizing the case on a real number rather than a guess.
The key local figure in Morecambe is £218,016, the average asking price recorded by home.co.uk in local data. For an owner with a 20% Help to Buy loan, that points to a redemption figure of £43,603.20 at that valuation level. That is the number many people underestimate. They remember the original cash loan, but the scheme is equity-based, so the Morecambe repayment follows today’s value, not yesterday’s balance.
Another Morecambe number worth looking at is £222,107, the current average listing price in the same research, with a 6-month change of -0.43% according to home.co.uk. That tiny movement tells you something useful. A small short-term shift can change the equity-loan repayment amount, but not usually enough to alter the wider mortgage strategy on its own. The bigger question in Lancaster district is how your post-redemption LTV lands once the full new mortgage is compared with the current property value.
Detached homes in Morecambe are at an average asking price of £281,286 in the supplied home.co.uk data, while flats sit at £65,000. That gap matters because lender appetite can look very different at each end of the market. A flat case with a small mortgage balance may clear the Help to Buy loan with less borrowing, while a larger detached home may need stronger affordability even if the applicant has plenty of equity. Our brokers model both the monthly payment and the LTV band before we advise on the cleanest route.
Data gaps matter too. Local detail varies by exact address, so we work from your property rather than a town-wide figure. We work with that reality rather than pretending the numbers are there. The valuation your surveyor gives for the specific Morecambe property will matter far more to your mortgage case than a generic headline anyway, because Target HCA and the lender both work off that figure.
Affordability is where some Morecambe owners hit the snag. The new loan has to absorb the existing mortgage and the Help to Buy redemption sum at the same time, so monthly payments can rise even if the equity loan charge disappears. That does not rule the case out. It just means our brokers need clean income evidence, current credit commitments and a clear view of how the new payment sits against your household budget in Lancashire.
LTV is often less of a problem than people expect. Say a Morecambe home is worth £218,016 and the new combined mortgage after redemption totals £163,603.20 before fees. That would put the borrowing at roughly 75.04% LTV. For many owners, that band is a better place than the original Help to Buy purchase structure suggested, because capital growth has done some of the work.
There is a fixed-rate issue to check as well. A Morecambe remortgage might trigger an early repayment charge on your current mortgage if you are still inside a fixed period. We run that calculation early. Sometimes paying the charge still makes sense because it stops the equity-loan interest from creeping up year after year, but the numbers have to be checked against your exact deal.
A Help to Buy redemption in Morecambe lives or dies on process. The Red Book valuation has to be one Target HCA will accept, and it has a shelf life. Leave it too long and the document may need to be refreshed before completion, which can push the Lancaster timetable back and create extra cost.
The solicitor’s role is just as important. On a standard remortgage, the legal work is fairly routine. On a Morecambe HTB redemption, the solicitor also has to file the redemption application, obtain the authority to complete and make sure the lender’s funds, the old mortgage repayment and the Target HCA amount all line up on one date. That money flow has to be right first time.
We stay on the case throughout. Our advisers speak to the lender. Our team tracks the valuation. We work alongside your solicitor so the Morecambe redemption does not stall because one document has gone missing or one figure no longer matches the latest statement.
No. In Morecambe, some lenders will consider a remortgage that includes the Help to Buy repayment and some will not. Our whole-of-market brokers filter for lenders that are open to HTB redemption cases, then check affordability, LTV and property type before an application goes in.
Yes. Target HCA usually requires a RICS Red Book valuation for a Help to Buy redemption in Morecambe. That valuation sets the percentage-based repayment figure, so the lender and solicitor need it to structure the case properly.
It usually takes longer than a plain remortgage because the Morecambe case includes valuation work, lender underwriting and Target HCA solicitor steps. A clean case can move well, but delays often come from waiting for the valuation, missing documents or solicitor queries on the redemption statement.
Yes, partial repayment is possible, though the rules and minimum chunks need checking at the time of application. In Morecambe, that route still needs a valuation and legal work, and the remaining equity loan will still rise or fall with the property value after the partial repayment.
You may have an early repayment charge if you remortgage before the fixed deal ends. Our brokers calculate that for your Morecambe mortgage and weigh it against the cost of keeping the Help to Buy loan, especially once the year-6 interest and later inflation-linked increases are in play.
It is based on the current value of the property, not just the original cash loan. In Morecambe, using the supplied average asking price of £218,016 as an illustration, a 20% equity loan would point to a repayment of £43,603.20.
Often, yes, depending on the lender and product. In a Morecambe redemption case, the new mortgage can usually include the current mortgage balance, the Help to Buy repayment and certain product fees, though adding fees increases the total borrowing and changes the LTV.
It can. Many Morecambe owners find that once the equity loan is gone, the case becomes a standard mortgage secured against the full property value, and that can open a wider lender pool. The outcome still depends on income, credit profile, property type and the final LTV after redemption.
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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.