I thought that top-ups were just for home improvements. This suggests that you might get one in your current situation.
What is a top-up mortgage?
Are you thinking of some home improvements? Or perhaps you want to help a family member buy a new home or you need to pay inheritance tax on a property? If the balance of your current AIB mortgage is less than the current value of your home you may be able to release the equity in your mortgage, to help with expense and more. You can:
I doubt a top-up mortgage is accepted by any lender on a family home at separation or divorce time, as once married the family home is protected by the Family Law (amended few years ago) and is owned by both partners (regardless if both partners are registered or not on the mortgage or only one of them and regardless of the fact that one of the partners took the mortgage before marriage in their sole name .. and regardless of who paid the mortgage and the percentage of how much each partner contributed).
I have a recent example, at separation time, when one of the partners who took the mortgage in the first place in their own name only, before the marriage, wanted to buy the other's half out by paying the other partner, half of the value of the property (minus what was still owed on the mortgage).
The lender (AIB) closed down the existing mortgage and opened a completely new mortgage, but only when a signed separation agreement and a deed of waiver were produced.
The two documents (voluntary separation agreement and a deed of waiver) where the base of AIB approving the new mortgage, where the property rights where clearly stated as "not a family home anymore" and not protected by the Family Law anymore, as the two partners were now legally separated, so the ownership rights have transferred by voluntary agreement to the person buying the other person out, the moment the other person receives the money and they also vacate the property.
The kids where to move out with the partner who was leaving the property, all clearly stated in the voluntary separation agreement, among a lot of other details of the separation itself.
Obviously a solicitor had to be paid to cover the conveyance, a process identical/similar as to taking a new mortgage on a property and same full costs and fees applying.
When a voluntary separation agreement and a deed of waiver can't be finalized between the two partners, a decree of judicial separation document or a decree of divorce document (issued by the family court) has to be produced instead to the lender.
The lender looks to be particularly sensible at the terms of separation when they deal with the property rights and a family home property under the Family Law makes no exception.
I hope my post makes sense and will help someone else, when they are doing their own research, in the context of the family home and separation or divorce, when one partner is looking to take a mortgage against that property and buy the other half out.