Blackrock1
Registered User
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You will not be able to sell your house or switch mortgage provider as things stand because your 10 year structural warranty is null and void.
Are you sure on that ? I’ve switched a couple of times and don’t remember being asked anything about the structural insurance ?
If the cost is 1percent of the rebuild cost then it’s not the end of the world, developer is trying to sort it out at the moment I believe
On a new build house? 100% you will, no question about that. No bank nowadays will give you a mortgage on a new build house without a 10 year structural warranty.I've never needed a 'structural warranty' in place before drawing down a mortgage.
I don't believe that's correct. There are lots of houses built in the last 10 years that don't have structural defects warranty in place, particularly self builds and small developments. In the absence of such cover, most banks will seek engineers certificates of compliance / completion, etc.On a new build house? 100% you will, no question about that. No bank nowadays will give you a mortgage on a new build house without a 10 year structural warranty.
Similarly if you try to change your mortgage provider before the 10 years have passed the bank will require a structural warranty in place (also referred to as latent defect warranty).
The requirements of mortgage providers in the UK is different to here.And if you still believe this is not true simply because you say you were never required to have one (without giving any specifics of your scenario, it could be a house that is more than 10 years old), take a read of this [broken link removed] or contact mortgage providers and ask them.
I thought Ulster were the only bank that insist on a warranty, because it caused a lot of noise when they made it a loan condition in 2017.
The requirements of mortgage providers in the UK is different to here.
We differ.
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