Remortgage to clear your HTB equity loan, stop the post-year-5 charges, and keep your home.








The Help to Buy equity loan was meant to be temporary. Once you hit year 6, the 0% period ends and the monthly interest starts, plus the £1 monthly management fee. Our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers help you remortgage in Stirling so your new mortgage pays off both your current mortgage balance and the Help to Buy redemption amount, in one completion.
This is not a standard remortgage. You need a Red Book RICS valuation that Target HCA will accept, a solicitor who can submit the Redemption Application through Target’s portal, and a lender whose underwriting is comfortable with HTB redemption lending. Our whole-of-market brokers compare deals across HTB-friendly lenders, then manage the case from valuation through to redemption, with the paperwork lined up so completion day clears Target correctly.

£485,000
Current median sold price
+7.3%
12-month sold price change
£97,000
Example 20% HTB equity share (worked from £485,000)
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Most Help to Buy homeowners repay the equity loan by remortgaging onto a larger mortgage. It is the cleanest way to settle the Target HCA balance without moving out. In practice, the new mortgage pays off your current mortgage lender and sends the equity-loan redemption funds to your solicitor, who then redeems the HTB loan at the same completion. One date. One legal process. One mortgage at the end.
The number that catches people out is that the equity loan is a percentage of the property’s current value, not the original amount you borrowed. That matters in Stirling because homedata.co.uk records a current median sold price of £485,000, up +7.3% over 12 months. If you bought in the early part of the scheme and values have moved since, your redemption figure can be higher than you remember, even if your mortgage balance has come down.
A worked example, using Stirling numbers. Say your home is valued at £485,000 (homedata.co.uk), your Help to Buy equity loan is 20%, and your current mortgage balance is £295,000. Your equity-loan redemption estimate is £97,000, which means a new mortgage of roughly £392,000 before fees. The post-redemption loan-to-value would be about 80.8% (£392,000 divided by £485,000), which often unlocks better lender choices than your original purchase LTV, even though the mortgage amount is bigger.
Now place that example on the ground in Stirling. If your property is in or near Bannockburn, you might have bought a newer build at Brucefields (Persimmon Homes) a few miles south of the city. If it is closer to Pirnhall Roundabout and Plean, Durieshill (Barratt and David Wilson Homes) has been a major pipeline with around 3,000 homes planned. Lenders can treat new builds differently from older sandstone homes around the Top of the Town, so you want an adviser who can place your case with an HTB-friendly lender from the start.
Help to Buy equity loan charging structure. Years 1 to 5: 0% interest. Year 6: 1.75%. Beyond: increases by RPI + 1% each year, plus a £1 monthly management fee.
Not every lender is comfortable with Help to Buy redemption cases. Some will not allow “additional borrowing” for the purpose of repaying the equity loan, even if your overall affordability is fine. Others want tight control over the solicitor process, the valuation wording, and the completion mechanics. That is why we start by filtering the market for lenders with a track record of accepting HTB redemption borrowing.
This matters in Stirling because property types vary hard within a small radius. A modern house off the A872 near Bellway’s Ridgewood can underwrite differently from a traditional sandstone property where water ingress risk is higher if gutters have been neglected. We place the case based on your property, your income, and the Target HCA requirements, then keep it moving so your valuation and offer stay in date.
Our HTB-specialist mortgage advisers take details of your current mortgage, the equity loan percentage, your income, and property type. We also check if your home sits in an area with known flood risk, like parts of the River Forth catchment, because this can affect lender choice and insurance assumptions.
We run affordability and credit checks and shortlist HTB-friendly lenders. If your property is a newer build at Brucefields or near Durieshill, we factor in any new-build lending rules and minimum lease terms if it is a flat.
You book a Red Book valuation that meets Target HCA’s standard. The valuer must produce the report in the required format so your solicitor can submit it with the Redemption Application. The valuation sets the HTB repayment amount, so accuracy matters.
We submit the full application using the confirmed valuation figure and your chosen product. At this stage we also plan how any product fees are handled, added to the loan or paid separately, because it changes the final loan amount and LTV.
Once the lender is happy with affordability, property checks, and your documents, they issue an offer. We check offer conditions for anything that could delay completion, including solicitor requirements and any retention clauses.
Your solicitor files the Redemption Application through Target’s portal, uploads the Red Book valuation, and confirms the completion statement. In a place like Stirling, where listed buildings are common across the wider council area, your solicitor may also be dealing with extra title queries that can slow a case unless managed early.
On completion day, your new lender repays your current mortgage, your solicitor sends the equity loan repayment to Target, and the HTB charge is removed. You finish with one mortgage and no HTB interest charges going forward.
The Target HCA redemption figure is driven by the Red Book valuation, not your estimate. In Stirling, where homedata.co.uk shows a current median sold price of £485,000, even small valuation movements can shift the repayment by thousands. Getting the valuation booked early means your AIP and full application are sized to the real figure, not a guess, which reduces last-minute lender downvaluations and offer revisions.
Price growth is the first local pressure point. homedata.co.uk records a +7.3% 12-month change on the current median sold price of £485,000 in Stirling. If your Help to Buy equity loan is 20%, that percentage applies to today’s value, so a rising market increases the redemption cost even if your mortgage balance has reduced. That is often the moment year-6 interest starts to sting, because you are paying interest on a balance that is also inflating with the local market.
LTV is the second pressure point, and it can go either way. The good news is that many HTB owners end up with a better LTV band than they had at purchase because the property value has risen since you bought. The catch is that your new mortgage is bigger because it includes the redemption, so we run both the “amount” test and the “percentage” test. A homeowner in a newer estate near Plean can have a very different lender pool from someone in an older sandstone property near the Top of the Town, even if both sit at the same LTV.
Property condition and construction type matter more in Stirling than many people expect. Older buildings often use sandstone and slate, and local notes point to water damage from leaking gutters as a recurring repair need in older sandstone stock. If your property is close to the River Forth and sits in a flood-exposed pocket, lenders can ask more questions about insurance history and resilience. This is where an adviser helps, picking lenders who are pragmatic on property reports while still meeting Target HCA’s redemption timetable.
Historic status is a final local layer. Across the Stirling Council area there are 32 conservation areas and 1,441 listed buildings, including 84 Category A listings. That does not mean your home is listed, but it increases the odds of extra conveyancing queries, and it can affect what is acceptable on repairs and alterations. We build time into the plan for solicitor due diligence, so your mortgage offer does not drift towards expiry while paperwork is still being chased.
After redemption, the equity loan disappears but your mortgage balance rises. That makes affordability the make-or-break test. We take your income, committed outgoings, childcare, credit commitments, and stress test your new mortgage size, so you do not get stuck after paying for the valuation and legal work.
LTV is simpler to calculate than it feels. New mortgage amount divided by current property value equals your post-redemption LTV. Using the Stirling median sold price of £485,000 from homedata.co.uk, a £392,000 mortgage would be around 80.8% LTV. Drop the mortgage to £363,750 and you are at 75% LTV, which can open up more lender options, so we also discuss overpayments, savings, and whether partial redemption is the smarter first move.
Fees change the final number. Product fees, legal fees, and sometimes a separate valuation cost can be added to the loan or paid upfront. In Scotland, your solicitor is doing two jobs at once on an HTB redemption remortgage, the remortgage conveyancing and the Target HCA redemption process, so you want a clear quote early so the lender application uses the right figures.
Stirling’s housing mix can be awkward for generic lender criteria. You have very old buildings near Stirling Castle and the Top of the Town, including stone-built stock where traditional materials and older roof structures are common. Timber is a major structural element in historic Scottish buildings, in floors, roofs, doors, and windows, so maintenance history can matter as much as the headline valuation.
Local stone adds its own quirks. Stirling’s historic buildings used a mix of sandstones, including Ballengeich sandstone, and sandstone from Carboniferous strata south of the town, sourced from quarries such as Denovan, Thornydyke, Polmaise, and Cat Craig. That does not mean your house is built from those exact sources, but it does signal why survey notes and lender valuations sometimes flag pointing, damp staining, or rainwater goods as risk items in older stock.
New-build estates bring a different checklist. If your HTB property sits in a development corridor like Durieshill between Pirnhall Roundabout and Plean, or near the A872 around Ridgewood, the lender may focus on new-build valuation support, any estate factoring arrangements, and warranty paperwork. Our brokers line up the documents up front, so the lender underwriter is not asking for them two weeks before completion.
No. Some lenders do not permit additional borrowing for the sole purpose of redeeming the equity loan, or they restrict it to certain products and LTV bands. Our whole-of-market brokers filter for HTB-friendly lenders, then match the lender’s criteria to your Stirling property type, valuation, and affordability.
Yes. Target HCA requires a Red Book RICS valuation for the redemption figure, and the report must meet their format. A lender valuation is not the same thing, and you cannot swap it in, even if the numbers look similar.
Timelines vary based on valuation booking, mortgage underwriting, and how quickly the solicitor can progress the Target portal steps. As a rule, the process is smoother when the Red Book valuation is booked early and your mortgage application is sized to the confirmed redemption amount, not an estimate.
Yes. Partial redemption, sometimes called staircasing, is allowed, but each redemption still needs the formal valuation and Target process. It can be a practical route if the full remortgage size pushes affordability, or if you are trying to reach a lower LTV band step-by-step.
You may have Early Repayment Charges if you remortgage before the fix ends. We build the ERC into the cost comparison and show you the break-even point, especially if you are approaching year 6 of the HTB loan where the interest charges start, because the saving can still outweigh the ERC for some homeowners.
No. The repayment is based on the agreed percentage of the property’s current value, set by the Red Book valuation. In Stirling, homedata.co.uk shows a current median sold price of £485,000 and +7.3% growth over 12 months, so rising values can increase the redemption figure even if your mortgage has reduced.
Not automatically, but it can influence which lenders are comfortable and what insurance evidence they may want. Stirling has a long history of river and surface water flooding linked to the River Forth catchment, and the area is classed as potentially vulnerable for flood risk, so it is best to flag any past claims and current cover early.
You will want a solicitor who has handled Target HCA redemptions before, because the portal steps and completion flow are specific. In the wider Stirling Council area, listed buildings and conservation areas are common, which can add extra title and alteration checks, so experience helps keep the case moving.
Free initial chat
Help with Target HCA steps, staircasing, and full redemption planning
From £350
Book a Red Book RICS valuation for Target HCA redemption
From £750
Find a solicitor familiar with Target HCA redemption applications
Free initial chat
Whole-of-market mortgage advice, including remortgage and product transfers
Free initial chat
HTB-specialist brokers to place and manage your case through to completion
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Remortgage to clear your HTB equity loan, stop the post-year-5 charges, and keep your home.
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