We are in a tiny house (family of five), worth about €300,000
If you don't engage with your bank, you will not be covered by the Mortgage Arrears Code, so they could seek to repossess immediately and the court will have little sympathy for you as Nick points out. I don't think you should take the risk.
Brendan
This is interesting. If the Op makes no contact at all with the bank regarding her plans how long before the bank tries to repossess - will they be keen to repossess a house with substantial negative equity? If the OP gets away without serious threat of repossession by the bank for, say 12 months of non payment, and then engages through MARP , does the bank have to give her a further 12 months before they move to repossess as she has now engaged with them?
Banks will repossess houses whether they are in negative equity or not if the customer is simply not paying anything.
On the other hand, the bank may justifiably be annoyed with someone who just tells them -without first talking and writing - that the bank will get nothing for two years. And they probably will come down hard and quickly on you.
I suspect the bank will take the second course of action -quick hard action- and you would be most unwise to go down that road. Courts don't much love the banks but they don't like people who don't communicate properly with those banks.
Then why the need for these cases?
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