Tag Archives: Lifetime Mortgage Products

Is an Enhanced Equity Release Calculator Available Yet?

Enhanced equity release calculator tools are available online. These calculators are specific to the enhanced, impaired, or ill health lifetime mortgage schemes on the market rather than home reversion or other lifetime mortgage products. Given the specific nature of these mortgages, the calculator has to take into account more information than the standard lifetime mortgage.

History of Enhanced Equity Release Plans
A decade ago enhanced equity release plans were on the market through Hodge Lifetime and Partnership Assurance. They provided enhanced options through home reversion plans. However, with changes made by the then Financial Services Authority, now the Financial Conduct Authority, the plans were discontinued, leaving the market without any enhanced home reversion or lifetime mortgage schemes.

In more recent years, new lenders have joined the market offering enhanced lifetime mortgage plans. Partnership re-entered followed by new companies like More2Life, Aviva, and Just Retirement. By new we mean new to the enhanced equity release plan, and not necessarily to the market as a whole.

Following the principles of enhanced annuity, enhanced or impaired equity release schemes use health as a way to provide the maximum equity release amount, which is where the enhanced equity release calculator comes in. Be aware that the more severe the illness is the greater the maximum equity amount will be.

Lenders Supplying Tools
Some brokerages and websites have developed the enhanced equity release calculator to help supply the maximum lump sum an individual may be able to take out of their home. Unfortunately, accuracy is difficult to predict due to the myriad questions on the health and lifestyle questionnaire which determines a person’s life expectancy. This questionnaire is coupled with a mortality indices table based on age and illness to give an applicable value.

This means the calculator is designed to give you the maximum amount based on the worst case scenario. You may or may not be a person in the worst case scenario, but that is the result you will get, therefore, you need to speak with a broker before deciding if this loan is truly right for you.

What can Brokers Do?
An independent financial broker specialising in equity release schemes should be contacted once you have a beginning figure for an enhanced equity release product. The adviser will take the enquiry beyond the standard calculator questions to see if there are any other factors that could release the maximum lump sum or if you will only be able to get a smaller amount. The enquiry is based on a Key Facts Illustration (quote) from relevant providers in the market.

A broker is able to discuss your situation with financial companies lending the money for lifetime mortgages. They can discuss whether there are other factors that might release more or see what current products are available to you.

You should be aware that even if something is advertised on TV, the Internet, radio, or through a calculator calculation, you may not be able to get that same product. This is where the broker comes in. They have resources you do not have available.

Why Use the Calculator
You are probably asking why you should use the calculator at all if you still have to speak with a broker. The main reason to use it is to see the potential maximum lump sum. If the maximum lump sum is not anywhere close to the funds you hope to unlock, it gives you an idea of whether lifetime mortgages and other equity release products are right for you.

Additionally, it tells you whether your ill health is a qualifying factor to release more equity than a standard lump sum. It might be a guide number that results, but it does prove whether going on to the next step and speaking with a broker is worth your time.

While the value might change to a lower one, the original calculation result gives you enough of an answer to get started. There are also times when the calculator is not giving you a high enough number because you have multiple health factors. If you can find a maximum lump sum that works for you based on what you input into a calculator and a broker can get more released it might work out better for you. Of course, as you use the enhanced equity release calculator, you do need to remember it is only an estimate. You always want to speak with a qualified professional who is independent to ensure you are getting the very best product for you.

Divider

 

How Does Age Affect the Release of Equity Calculation?

How Does Age Affect the Release of Equity Calculation?

Equity release is a way to withdraw some of the cash value tied up into your property. While traditionally the only path for a release of equity would be to sell the property, equity release offers a more flexible way to continue living in your home while accessing the cash tied up into the property. This can only be facilitated by receiving advice from a qualified equity release consultant, in conjunction with an equity release provider themselves such as Aviva, Just Retirement, Hodge Lifetime & many more of these niche mortgage lenders.

First an introduction to the types of equity release

There are two types of equity release products – lifetime mortgages and home reversion plans. While lifetime mortgages are loans taken against the value of the property, home reversion involves notionally selling a portion of the property with the lender recovering the proportional value when the house is sold. In all equity release schemes, the lender recovers the money from the sale of property, which happens only after you have died or moved into a care home.

Whether it is a lifetime mortgage or home reversion, the release of equity is basically money that you receive from the lender, and which the lender can recover after the plan ends. How much the lender can afford to lend, at what rate, and whether they can afford to lend at all, depends on the value of the property, the amount of equity that needs to be released, and the expected term of the loan; namely life expectancy.

The feasibility and exact terms of an equity release plan therefore depend on different relevant factors, some of which determine the expected term of the loan or plan. Since most equity release products have no fixed term, and go on until the end of life, or until you move out and into permanent care, it is the health and age of the client that determines the expected term of the equity release plan. The age of the applicant is therefore an important factor that significantly affects the release of equity.

Relationship between age & release size

Typically, the longer the term of the loan, the more the risks are for the lender in that the loan will compound over a longer duration. As there are many variables built into life expectancy, the lender does take the risk that: –

  • House prices may remain static, even fall over the term of the mortgage
  • The equity release loan interest will accrue for longer than the average life expectancy
  • The health of the individual will be good, thus leading to prolonged longevity
  • Condition of the house may deteriorate, leading to un-saleability

All these factors place a greater strain on the insurance policy that equity release lenders have on these loans – the no negative equity guarantee. They actuarially calculate the average life expectancy and then pitch their loan-to-values in accordance with this data. They will win on some cases, but lose on others & this is all factored into the no negative equity guarantee insurance policy. The danger for lenders in hoping they do not need to use this insurance policy, lie with the outside factors mentioned above that could seriously affect these chttp://www.equityreleasecalculator.net/wp-admin/post.php?post=46&action=editalculations.

Therefore the younger the applicant, the higher the risks, and the older the applicant, the fewer the risks involved for the equity release provider. This is why the older one is, the bigger the release of equity can be offered by these lenders. Hence, when considering a release of equity, do your sums first and always obtain a Key Facts Illustration from your equity release adviser. This will detail the exact amount, year-on-year, how much the balance will reach in the future. A useful piece of data for considering what the final balance may be, albeit guessing the length of the term can be an unnerving experience!

Loan-to-value summary

The minimum age for most lifetime mortgage products is 55 years, and generally speaking, the further away you are from this age, the more you can borrow. In fact, if you are aged 55, currently the maximum lifetime mortgage scheme will allow is 20.5%. This will steadily rise as one gets older and as a rule of thumb will be 1% each year you get older. Most equity release companies allow maximum release of equity only for older clients upto approx. age 90+ with an overall maximum release from any lender of 55%.

However, home reversion plans do not commence until age 65, some 10 years later. The calculation for the size of a home reversion release is based again on age, but also the sex of the individual(s). The reversion provider will receive a proportion of the house value in exchange for a tax-free cash lump sum to the homeowner.

The difference between the home reversion scheme and lifetime mortgage is that with a home reversion you can sell 100% of the value of the property, the converse relationship exists with a lifetime mortgage. However, even selling 100% of the property doesn’t mean you receive 100% of its value. This will usually be half of the equivalent percentage sold. Thus if you sold 100%, you are likely to receive around 50% of the value. Again, like a lifetime mortgage, the older you are, the greater the percentage over & above this 50% figure you will receive.

All these examples based on age, property value & health can be inputted into a good equity release calculator to provide the results you require in order to complete your equity release research.

If unsure call 0800 471 4796 to speak to a qualified independent equity release adviser who can provide guidance on the best schemes available.