Dr Strangelove
Registered User
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- 1,912
But it is up to the lender, there is provision in the CCA for this very circumstance and the bank can accept a waiver of mort prot. Problem is there though it is at the bank's discretion and so if they won't give it then that's it. I normally don't have much good to say about Ulster Bank but they were great for giving waivers where warranted, if you met the criteria of the CCA you pretty much got it!For example take a couple in their forties on an income of €75k each where one spouse had cancer three years ago. Couple wants to borrow €200k against a €1m property in a trade-up. It should be up to the lender to decide whether they should lend and on what terms. In this example the mortgage is serviceable on one spouse’s salary, and there is huge equity.
I agree it is ultimately up to the lender but it sets the default as life insurance being required.But it is up to the lender, there is provision in the CCA for this very circumstance and the bank can accept a waiver of mort prot.
Process to do so can take decades; insisting on insurance is far easier.right to go through the repossession procedure to recoup their money
I agree. People get sick and die pretty predictably so in practice this all averages out over a portfolio of thousands of loans.Seems like a double guarantee on a load.
I agree but this is inherent to mortgage lending in Ireland even to perfectly healthy people too.Process to do so can take decades; insisting on insurance is far easier.
Our repossession system is completely dysfunctional and biased far too much against lenders.Cant understand why it is a legal requirement for the under 50's as ultimately the bank hold the deeds and have the right to go through the repossession procedure to recoup their money !
So I guess your pro charging every mortgage holder a premium for the very few that default. Smack's a bit of communism to me but each to their own.Our repossession system is completely dysfunctional and biased far too much against lenders.
Its not prescriptive however & is very much up to the lender.There is provision there for people to be exempted
As a vaper I disagree - close to €1000 a year. More than my annual gym subscription to a prestigious Dublin South Side gym to help me stop dying.Mortgage protection isn't expensive.
I agree but this is a question of degree.Removing it from a banks perspective will drive up the interest rate of mortgages since the bank has to factor this new risk in.
I'm mortgage free but I don't think we ever paid more then €350 a year in the past. Out of curiosity, I put in a "makey up" request on Bonkers.ie and for 34 yr old non-smoker for €500k cover I was quoted €252 a yearAs a vaper I disagree - close to €1000 a year. More than my annual gym subscription to a prestigious Dublin South Side gym to help me stop dying.
A house with one owner can still be a family home, accommodating a depedent spouse and/or minor children. In fact this is pretty common.Why should sole owners pay for mortgage protection?
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