How to repay your equity loan when you remortgage
How to repay your Help to Buy: Equity Loan, either in full or in part, when you remortgage your home.
Applies to England
Making changes to your equity loan or repayment mortgage
Before you make any changes to your equity loan or mortgage, you need to understand how those changes may affect you. You should think about getting independent financial and legal advice.
You need to keep paying your management fee, and monthly interest if this is due, until you repay your equity loan in full.
You’ll need to settle any outstanding payments, or ask our Customer Service team to set up a payment plan, before making any changes to your equity loan.
How much you need to repay
We work out the equity loan amount you need to repay based on the market value of your home at the time you choose to repay.
The market value of your property is set by a Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) valuation.
If you are paying monthly interest or management fees, you should keep making these payments.
You’ll need to settle any outstanding payments in full, or set up a payment plan with our Customer Service team, before they can continue with your request.
The amount you repay includes interest, fees and any outstanding payments, or arrears. You must repay all of these in full to complete the repayment process.
Follow these steps to repay your equity loan.
How to fully or partly repay when you remortgage
If you’re repaying your equity loan in full you do not need our permission.
If you want to repay part of your equity loan when you remortgage, you’ll first need to get our permission to:
- change your mortgage provider
- increase the amount you’re borrowing on your existing mortgage
If you’re borrowing more money on your repayment mortgage, see our guide on additional borrowing.
Follow these steps to repay your equity loan.
1. Get a surveyor’s valuation report
Before you contact a surveyor, you must tell us about anything that may affect the value of your home as we may need to agree which RICS surveyor you can use.
This includes things like:
- external cladding
- any breaches of planning permission
- building regulations which have an impact on your property’s value (for example, a conservatory which doesn’t have a building control certificate)
If your property is affected by external cladding
If your block of flats has certain types of external cladding, you may need a specialist valuation on your property.
How the report should be made
You’ll need to:
- send our Customer Service team a RICS valuation report for your property, so we can work out how much you need to repay
- pay for the report yourself
The report must be:
- created, signed and dated by the RICS certified surveyor who did the survey. Find a RICS surveyor in your area.
- on company’s headed paper addressed to Homes England
- supplied as a PDF file or a digital document that you cannot edit
We cannot accept valuations that are made for bank or mortgage purposes.
Our criteria for the surveyor
You should give the surveyor making the valuation a copy of these criteria.
They must:
- be both RICS qualified and registered
- be a RICS member or fellow (MRICS or FRICS) - if you have Help to Buy: Equity Loan (2021-2023)
- be independent of any estate agent
- not be related or known to you
- inspect the inside of the property
- provide at least 3 comparable properties and sale prices within the last 12 months - they must be like-for-like homes in type, size, age and within 2 miles of the property that is being inspected
- provide bespoke market commentary and reference how the comparable properties provided justify the determination of market value
The report is valid for 3 months from the date it was produced.
You must send us the report within 5 working days of the date it was issued.
Post:
Help to Buy customer services, PO Box 5262, Lancing, BN99 9HE
Email:
[email protected]
When emailing our Customer Service team, please include your account number and a brief summary of your query in your email subject line, i.e. RICS valuation report.
If the report expires
If the valuation report expires before you repay your equity loan, we’ll need a ‘desktop valuation’ which will extend the original valuation by 3 months.
This letter must be:
- from the same RICS surveyor that made the valuation
- on the company’s headed paper addressed to Homes England
- supplied as a PDF file or a digital document that you cannot edit
If you do not complete the repayment process in the additional 3 months, you’ll need to provide a new valuation report.
If your valuation report is due to expire, we’ll write to you and ask you to get a desktop valuation.
Getting a desktop valuation
The RICS firm who did the original valuation can supply a desktop valuation report without visiting the property in person.
They must:
- refer to the original valuation report
- confirm the updated report is a desktop valuation
- provide at least 6 comparable properties and sale prices from the last year if the property has increased or decreased in value. If 6 are not available, they must state this clearly
- provide bespoke market commentary and reference how the comparable properties provided justify the determination of market value
The report must be:
- made within 2 weeks of the expiry date of the original valuation report
- completed, signed and dated by the same RICS surveyor
- on the company’s headed paper addressed to Homes England *supplied as a PDF file or a digital document that you cannot edit
This valuation is valid for 3 months from the date it is produced.
We need to receive it within 5 working days of the date it was issued.
If we reject the report
You must make sure your surveyor carries out the valuation in the way we’ve asked for it.
We may reject the valuation report if it:
- does not follow the instructions
- is too high or low compared to similar properties
If we reject the report, you’ll need to provide and pay for a new report.
If you do not agree with the new valuation
Under the terms of your equity loan agreement the President of RICS will appoint a RICS surveyor to produce a final valuation.
2. Decide what percentage of your equity loan you are repaying
You can repay all or part of your equity loan. Any part payment must be at least 10% of the market value of your home. You cannot leave less than 5% of the market value amount to repay.
3. Find a conveyancer
You must instruct a conveyancer to carry out the various legal processes that are required.
You can find a conveyancer on the Law Society’s website or the Council of Licensed Conveyancers’ website.
4. Complete the equity loan repayment application form
Complete and return the application form to our Customer Service team.
You must provide your conveyancer’s contact details and give the conveyancer authority to act on your behalf.
You must also provide a copy of your new mortgage offer, which you can get from your lender.
5. Pay the administration fee and arrears
You’ll need to pay an administration fee of £200 when you apply to repay your equity loan.
You’ll also have to clear any arrears or outstanding payments before you apply. If you cannot clear your arrears, you may be able to:
- continue to apply if you agree to a payment plan
- clear the arrears at the same time you repay your equity loan
Your conveyancer will need to confirm with our Customer Service team if this is possible.
How to pay
You can pay our administrator by:
- online bank transfer
- debit card by calling 0300 123 4123
- cheque
You must tell us if you pay online. Email [email protected] or call the number above to confirm.
When emailing our Customer Service team, please include your account number and a brief summary of your query in your email subject line, for example ‘payment’.
Our Customer Service team is available Monday to Friday 8am to 8pm and Saturday 9am to 1pm (excluding UK public holidays).
Payment details
Bank name: Lloyds Bank PLC
Account name: EQGATEWAY RE HE HELP TO BUY ADMIN
Sort code: 30-80-12
Account number: 24501860
Reference: Your customer reference number or first line of your address and postcode.
We cannot progress your application until we’ve received this payment.
6. Receive a redemption letter
We’ll send you and your conveyancer a redemption (repayment) letter after you’ve sent us:
- the RICS valuation report
- your completed application form
- the administration fee
The letter will confirm:
- that you can repay your equity loan
- the percentage of equity loan you took out
- how much your repayment amounts will be, based on the market valuation report
The repayment amount will include any outstanding interest, fees, and arrears. When you’ve sent us everything, we’ll review your application and contact you if we need more information.
Legal undertaking agreement
We’ll send your conveyancer a list of items they need to put into a ‘legal undertaking’. This is a legal agreement formalised in paperwork.
If the completion date on the undertaking is delayed by more than a week, we may need to create a new undertaking and repayment amount.
We will not grant an ‘Authority to Complete’ (a form giving you permission to complete your sale and repay your equity loan) until you have repaid everything you owe, or a payment plan is agreed.
Repay your equity loan
We will send the ‘Authority to Complete’ within 5 days of receiving the legal undertaking from your conveyancer (or when a payment plan has been agreed).
This means you can repay your equity loan and complete the repayment process.
If you are:
- repaying your equity loan in full, there are some extra steps to take before we can send you an ‘Authority to Complete’. This is a legal document giving you permission to repay your loan.
- borrowing more money on your existing mortgage, you’ll need to get permission to remortgage
Completing the process
-
Your conveyancer transfers the funds to repay your equity loan in full or in part. The total amount will include any interest, charges, administration fees and arrears that you owe.
-
Your conveyancer sends you the relevant completion documents.
-
When we receive the funds, we’ll check that the amount matches the figures on the Authority to Complete and inform your conveyancer.
-
Your conveyancer certifies this and sends you a ‘completion statement’ on headed paper.
-
Once you’ve repaid in full your equity loan and other costs, we’ll apply asking the Land Registry to remove the charge on your property.
If you’re paying monthly interest and management fees, you should keep making these payments until the process is complete.
Your feedback matters. Please complete our short survey, it will only take a few minutes.
Updates to this page
Published 5 May 2021Last updated 23 November 2023 + show all updates
-
Guide has been updated to encourage customers to complete an application form before paying an administration fee.
-
Updated contact details
-
Updated to make the separation between Homes England and the equity loan administrator clearer.
-
Added a link to the cladding guidance for Help to Buy homes.
-
First published.