Brokers advised to consider bridging to beat stamp duty deadline
Clever Lending is encouraging brokers to consider regulated bridging loans as a solution for delayed property purchases, if a chain has broken or completion is looking unlikely to be achieved before the end of the stamp duty holiday.
"A bridge could come in here and save the day, by providing quicker short-term finance to secure new properties now and save the SDLT."
The specialist lending distributor believes regulated bridges are a great short-term solution to make sure delayed transactions are complete - and new purchases can be made – in time for when the scheme ends.
Paul Day, director of business development at Clever Lending, said: “The property market has been extremely buoyant over the past six months, with people taking advantage of the Government’s SDLT break.
“Although we don’t know if this will be extended, there are reports that there are up 50% more homes in the sales process than there were this time last year, we are also getting messages from lenders and particularly solicitors saying they’re very busy and getting booked-up as the deadline looms.
“A bridge could come in here and save the day, by providing quicker short-term finance to secure new properties now and save the SDLT. It could even help the property chain move and achieve the deadline, with the exit being a traditional mortgage.
“The latest Bridging Trends report, which Clever Lending contributes to, shows a 46% rise in gross bridging loan volumes in Q3 2020, as activity recovers from the Covid-19 lockdown.
“This type of finance is a great solution for home buyers, and I would urge brokers to get in touch if they have clients who are looking to take advantage of the SDLT holiday while they can. Clever Lending are happy to take on the advice process or package the case with the introducer giving the advice.”
Breaking news
Direct to your inbox:
More
stories
you'll love:
This week's biggest stories:
This week's biggest stories:
MPowered Mortgages
MPowered closes to new business amid potential sale
FCA
FCA bans and fines adviser £100,000
Budget
Reeves lays groundwork for tax rises in surprise pre-Budget speech
Santander
Santander reduces mortgage rates by up to 0.36% and launches new large loans
Pensions
Budget rumours drive 45% spike in pension lump sum enquiries
HSBC
HSBC launches 6.5x income mortgage range