Mercantile Trust enhances buy-to-let criteria
Specialist lender Mercantile Trust has made a series of improvements to its buy-to-let criteria.

Top slicing is now available using surplus rental income from the portfolio, with first-time buyers, HMOs and DSS tenants accepted. There will also be no credit scoring or minimum income required.
They will also now allow landlords to have two units of adverse credit over the past 12 months, ignoring anything over 12 months.
Items no longer taken into account include:
• Mail order and communications/telecoms missed payments,
• Discharged bankrupts over three years old,
• IVAs: must be maintained, up-to-date and being settled with loan,
• Partially missed mortgage payments,
• Outstanding CCJs if under £300; under £3,000 and satisfied, and all over 12 months old,
• Utility bills ignored if accounts are two or fewer payments in arrears, irrelevant of previous account conduct.
The lender has also reduced its pricing, along with adding new two and five-year fixed rate options to its product range.
Mercantile Trust provides first and second charge buy-to-let mortgages from £10,000 up to £500,000, on property values from £60,000, up to 75% LTV in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.
Maeve Ward, director of commercial operations at Mercantile Trust, commented: “The comprehensive changes to our buy-to-let proposition are a signal to the market that we have a real appetite to lend. Our range offers products to cater for all situations and landlords of varying experience, with criteria that caters for landlords who do not fit many specialist lender borrower profiles.
“Our experience allows us to provide lending solutions to sectors and customers traditionally underserved and these new enhancements will further increase the types of borrowers we can support providing more options to our brokers.”
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