Your mortgage lender would rather reach agreement with you over arrears payments instead of evicting you.
Here are some suggestions you could offer to repay your arrears.
You can offer to repay the arrears over any amount of time up to the remaining term of the mortgage.
Try to start some arrears repayments as soon as you can.
You can offer to clear the arrears by paying a bit more each month on top of your monthly payments. Even if your mortgage lender doesn't think you’re offering enough, pay the extra amount anyway - they can't refuse to take it.
Explain why you can only afford this amount – they may not be aware of your circumstances. Until you explain your problems, you're just another account number.
If you are able afford your normally monthly payments, but can’t afford anything towards the arrears, you could ask your lender if you can delay arrears payments for the time being pending a review in say, 6 months.
You would need to offer a convincing reason why you can't afford repayments now, but are confident you will be able to pay in the future.
You could ask your mortgage company to capitalise your arrears. This means adding them to your total mortgage balance, spreading the arrears over the remaining period of your mortgage.
This will increase monthly repayments, but not by a great amount. You will go deeper into debt this way, but no one else is likely to offer you a better rate than your current mortgage provider.
If you've failed maintain revised repayment arrangements before or if you have negative equity when taking into account the arrears, this is unlikely to be a option available to you.
This will mean your monthly payments do not rise to cover the extra arrears repayments. However, you will pay back more in total as you'll be in debt longer. This will cost more in the long run than adding the arrears to the mortgage.
An extension is more difficult to arrange if you have an interest-only mortgage and are using an endowment policy, PEP or ISA to pay off the loan.
If your mortgage is interest only but linked to an endowment policy or PEP etc, and you can’t afford both sets of payments, (the interest payments on the loan and the payments towards the endowment policy), you could ask the endowment policy company if you can suspend paying into the endowment for a while.
You may have to reach agreement with them how to catch up the payments once you restart payments into the policy. Otherwise, at the end of the mortgage the policy may not be large enough repay the loan in full.
If your endowment policy has built up a reasonable value, you could use it to clear the arrears.
This would mean having to take out a repayment mortgage, or finding another way to ensure you are able to repay the money borrowed.
Before you surrender an endowment policy or change to a repayment mortgage, you will need to speak to your mortgage lender and the endowment company.
If you surrender your policy early, its value can be considerably reduced. You should think carefully before you do this, and first ask your endowment provider how much you would get should you seek to surrender it now.
If you can't see a way to affording your mortgage repayments in the long term, then don't sit back waiting for the inevitable.
If your home is repossessed by your creditors, they will take control of its sale.
Their intention will be to arrange for a quick sale to recover their money, normally at auction. Under such circumstances, properties tend to sell for around 85% of their true market value. This is clearly not in your best interests.
4th November 2009, Aylesbury County Court
Client had fallen into arrears of £7000 due to ill health of husband. Now both partners back earning a full wage the judge suspended the order with a payment of £200 on top of the mortgage payment.
2nd November 2009, Bow County Court
Client had fallen into arrears of £14,780 due to financial trouble with his own business. Now with the business back up and running and generating income the Judge suspended the warrant with the client paying £150 on top of the contractual payments.
21st October 2009, Colchester County Court
Client fell into arrears of £6000 due to previous employer not paying wages. Now in a new more secure job the judge suspended the warrant with the client paying contractual mortgage payments plus £100.
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