If you are doing shared ownership you can only go with the council, so they organise their solicitor and mortgage stuff for you. All you do is sign. However if you are buying affordable housing and your going with your own bank, you arrange your own solicitor and the bank organise your mortgage protection.
max term loan with DCC is 35 years, either way, shared ownership or affordable housing...
My friend will prob go with the best tracker over the longest term for now but it depends on the following:
Is there an ability to over pay the mortgage like a normal tracker when the house is fully furnished and if the owner has an increasing salary in coming years? Is there any benefit in doing this due to clawback? I think the clawback has no effect on this.
Lender: do any of the lenders consider LTV of property value and not just the value you are offered the property at.
Valuation - offered 2 bed apt in DCC. Looks like getting independent valuations will have to be carried out and a haggling process. We will have to do the figures thoroughly but fingers crossed it will work out as the location is not so bad. Hopefully the apt will be nice.
Can home improvements be offset against the clawback - i.e. cost of floors, tiles, labour deducted from clawback figure - say €10K?
Buying an affordable house is more difficult than it needs to be. You have to be very sure that you are going with correct lender as at present you can't change. Most people that are buying affordable housing are those who need to be able to change lender and avail of lower rates etc.
I presume its Mortgage Payment Protection your referencing to. The life policy that you affect to cover the mortgage in the event of your death is a Mortgage Protection Policy