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| *The Commerce Journal>>>Renting & Real Estate |
Can someone please tell us how a retnetion works on a mortgage? U will not believe this!!!? |
So, me and my fiance have been purchasing his fathers house, as a gift of deed, for less than a third of the property price! (Lucky we know)! Basically its 拢170k and we're buying it for 拢50k, because he doesn't want it no more and cant afford the upkeep, and as my fiance is the only child, we said we'd take it off his hands for some cash. Ok so for those who don't understand, it matters as to who owns the house as to who pays the mortgage. I'm going back a few years, but we had a retention put on the property we wanted to buy. When we priced up the jobs we got a builder to do the jobs much cheaper than the retention price. We got the jobs done, showed the receipts to prove works finished (not sure now if they did come back out and inspect work - think perhaps they did). We borrowed the 'missing' money from a relative to complete the sale, got the jobs done with some of our own money, then the relative was paid back when the retention money came through. In effect you are short twice, the money they withhold and paying out to get jobs done. But the lenders want to make sure the house would sell if you defaulted, so the jobs must be quite important to be done. If you are all a big happy family what does it matter who owns it? Get the odd jobs done (more than 'odd' if 拢10k's worth!) while he is in there and be bloody grateful you were lucky enough to be in this situation! You don't go into enough detail, but 拢10k is a lot of work. Like underpinning, or re-roofing; jobs that if aren't done make the property worthless. I have no clue where you get the 170k value, and you don't mention the amount of the EXISTING mortgage. Based on what the valuer recommended, they believe that until the repairs are complete, the house is NOT worth enough to guarantee the mortgage company gets paid if they have to foreclose. What you are describing is neither a gift NOR a sale. Based on that, I doubt YOU have a clue. Usually when you get your mortgage offer through it will state in the conditions of the offer that all works specified as part of the retention are carried out before the completion of the sale, it may be that you only need to get some reports carried out to show that the house is sound. You are buying this house with a 100% mortgage - the important figure is what you are paying for the house, not what its worth. The lender is lending you 100% of the purchase price of the house and so, in their eyes, you are a risk. The retention is not meant to 'punish' the vendor, but to ensure that the property which the lender is investing their money in is saleable should you default on the mortgage. This situation often happens and has nothing to do with the fact that you are purchasing from a relative. |
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