Clear your equity loan with a remortgage built around the Target process.








Our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers work across Saltburn, Marske and New Marske for owners who want the equity loan gone and the monthly charge stopped. We compare deals across HTB-friendly lenders, then manage the case from first call through to completion. That means the valuation, the mortgage offer, the solicitor work and the Target HCA paperwork all sit in one chain. No loose ends.
Homes on Marske Road, Longbeck Lane and around Glenside do not all get treated the same by lenders, so the borrowing strategy needs to fit the property as well as the numbers. A flat in Saltburn Conservation Area, a newer home in New Marske, or a house near Balmoral Terrace can all throw up different checks. Our whole-of-market brokers know which lenders will accept HTB redemption borrowing, which ones will not, and where the timing matters most. That matters when the loan is already costing you interest after year 5.

18,863
Area Population (2024 est.)
£254,073
Average Asking Price
0.77%
3-Month Asking Price Change
£50,815
Illustrative 20% HTB Loan
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Most HTB holders in Saltburn do not sell first. They remortgage onto a larger loan that covers the current mortgage balance plus the equity-loan redemption, so the old Help to Buy charge is cleared on completion. On a house near Marske Road or a newer plot in New Marske, that can mean one new mortgage rather than two separate routes. The new lender is usually looking at the current value, the redemption figure, your income and the condition of the home.
Take the £254,073 asking-price signal for Saltburn-by-the-Sea as a working example. A 20% equity loan against that benchmark is about £50,815, so if your current mortgage balance were £140,000, the new borrowing would need to cover about £190,815 before fees. Add valuation, legal work and any product fee, and the offer needs to be sized correctly from the start. That is why our advisers like to see the loan-repayment figure early, especially where the home is in Saltburn Conservation Area or close to High Street in Marske.
This route suits owners who want to keep the property and stop the equity-loan interest from creeping up after year 5. It can also work well where the home value has risen since purchase, because the post-redemption loan-to-value can be better than the one you started with. That is useful on a property in Glenside, or a more modern house on Longbeck Lane, where the lender may be happier with the end figure than with the original purchase setup. Early repayment charges on your existing mortgage still need checking if you are in a fix, so the numbers have to be run properly before you move.
Illustration based on a £50,815 equity loan. Years 1 to 5 carry 0% interest plus the £1 monthly management fee. Year 6 is 1.75%, then the rate moves to RPI plus 1% after that. The mortgage-top-up figure is a comparison only, not a quote.
Not every lender accepts Help to Buy redemption borrowing in the same way. Some are fine with a single remortgage that clears the equity loan and the old mortgage together, while others want the case structured differently or will rule it out. Our whole-of-market brokers filter for HTB-friendly lenders first, so you are not wasting time on a Marske Road valuation for a lender that will not touch the structure.
That filter matters more on older or more characterful homes. A listed property such as Balmoral Terrace in Saltburn, or a house close to the Marske Conservation Area with older sandstone or Pease brick, can trigger extra questions about condition and survey evidence. A lender that is comfortable with a standard New Marske home on Longbeck Lane may look at a period property near High Street in a different way. We compare the paperwork before the application goes in, not after the offer has stalled.
We start with the basic numbers, your mortgage balance, your Help to Buy loan and the address, whether that is a home on Glenside or a newer place in New Marske. We also check if you are in a fix, because the early repayment charge can change the maths quickly.
Next comes the AIP. Our advisers use the likely redemption figure and the local value signal, so the lender sees a realistic borrowing request from the outset rather than a guess.
A RICS valuer completes the Red Book report that Target HCA will accept. This is important for homes in Saltburn Conservation Area, Marske Conservation Area and any property where the build or finish is not straightforward.
We submit the mortgage application once the AIP and valuation line up. The lender then checks income, spending, credit and the property, including anything unusual about the construction or location.
If the lender is happy, you receive the formal offer. At this point the figures should already cover the current mortgage, the HTB redemption and any fees that have been built into the plan.
Your HTB-experienced solicitor uses the Target portal to submit the Redemption Application and final documents. This is the part that clears the equity loan properly, so the paperwork has to match the valuation and the mortgage offer.
On completion day, the money flows to the right places and Target is paid off. Your old Help to Buy charge is then redeemed, which leaves you with the new mortgage only.
Get the Red Book valuation booked before the AIP if you can. That way the lender has the repayment figure in front of it when the mortgage is sized, instead of working from a rough estimate. On a Saltburn home where the value has moved since purchase, even a small change can shift the redemption sum and the loan-to-value check.
Local price movement matters because the Help to Buy redemption sum moves with the property value. Using the Saltburn-by-the-Sea asking-price signal of £254,073, a 0.77% rise over three months is about £1,958 of extra value, which would add roughly £392 to a 20% equity-loan redemption. That is not a huge number on its own, but it changes the mortgage sizing and the cash you need at completion. On a parish population of 18,863, plenty of homes are in the same broad market band, so small shifts matter.
The new mortgage has to cover the current mortgage balance, the redemption figure and any fees. If the balance were £145,000 and the redemption figure was £50,815, a simple remortgage target would be about £195,815 before product costs, legal work and any lender fees. Against the £254,073 benchmark, that sits at roughly 77% loan-to-value, which is a different position from the original purchase in many cases. That can open the door to a better product set, although the rate still depends on credit, income and the lender’s view of the property.
Affordability still does the heavy lifting. A lender will check your income, outgoings, dependants, existing debt and whether the home sits in an older part of Saltburn or nearer the flooding concerns that have come up around Marske Road in local planning discussions. New Marske and the Longbeck Lane site have their own context, and a broker who knows the area will think about that before recommending the lender. It saves time, and it avoids applying to a lender that dislikes the property profile from the start.
The new mortgage normally covers the old mortgage balance, the Help to Buy redemption and any fees that are being rolled in. That is then measured against the current property value, so the post-redemption loan-to-value can be worked out cleanly. On a £254,073 home with a £190,815 new loan, the LTV is about 75%.
That post-redemption figure often looks better than the one on the original purchase. A home on Balmoral Terrace, or a terrace near High Street in Marske, may have gained enough value to move into a stronger lending band, even if the house itself is older. Newer homes on Longbeck Lane can be simpler from a survey point of view, but the lender still checks whether the final borrowing stays inside its own rules.
No, they do not. Some lenders are happy to advance enough to clear the equity loan and the mortgage in one go, while others will not accept the structure at all. Our brokers check the lender appetite first, which matters on homes in Saltburn Conservation Area, Marske Conservation Area and the newer stock in New Marske.
Yes. Target HCA expects a RICS Red Book valuation for the redemption figure, and a desktop estimate will not do the job. If the property is on Marske Road, Glenside or High Street in Marske, the valuer will also note the age, condition and any conservation area issues.
Many cases run in a matter of weeks, but a listed building or a fixed-rate mortgage can slow things down. A flat in Saltburn or a home near Longbeck Lane may move faster than a Victorian terrace with extra solicitor checks, especially where the valuation or title documents need more work.
Yes, that is staircasing, and it can reduce the equity-loan charge without clearing the whole thing. It still needs a proper valuation and Target paperwork, so it is not the quick shortcut some people expect on a property in Marske or New Marske.
You may face an early repayment charge if you leave the fix before it ends. Our advisers work out whether the charge is still worth paying by comparing it with the saving from clearing the Help to Buy loan, which is the bit that usually bites after year 5.
Usually yes, if the lender is happy with the overall loan-to-value and affordability. That can include the valuation, the solicitor work, the product fee and the redemption amount itself, although every lender sets its own cap.
It can do. Older homes around the Marske Conservation Area, or listed properties such as Balmoral Terrace and Incline Keepers Cottage, often need a closer look than a newer house on Longbeck Lane. The right lender will still consider them, but the underwriting can be more detailed.
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Read the scheme steps for Saltburn owners who still have an equity loan.
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Book a RICS Red Book valuation that Target HCA will accept.
Quote
Use a solicitor who knows the Redemption Application and Target portal process.
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Compare remortgage options if you need one new loan to clear the equity loan.
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Talk to a whole-of-market adviser who checks HTB-friendly lenders first.
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Clear your equity loan with a remortgage built around the Target 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.