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    Mortgages at their most affordable for 14 years

    Average mortgage payments for new borrowers, including first-time buyers and home movers, stood at 27pc of disposable earnings in the fourth quarter of 2011.

    Mortgage payments for new borrowers have reached their most affordable levels for 14 years, with typical payments in some areas of Scotland and northern England taking up less than a fifth of disposable incomes, research from Halifax has found.

    Average mortgage payments for new borrowers, including first-time buyers and home movers, stood at 27pc of disposable earnings in the fourth quarter of 2011.

    This marks the lowest proportion since spring 1997 when a 26pc proportion was recorded, and stands well below the 37pc average over the past 27 years.

    The study also highlighted a “clear North/South divide”, with the least affordable areas located in London and the South East.

    Kensington and Chelsea in London was named as the least affordable local authority district, with mortgage payments taking up 78pc of disposable local earnings.

    The Scottish areas of East Ayrshire, where mortgage payments take up 15.7pc of take home pay, and West Dunbartonshire and North Ayrshire, where payments account for 16.2pc of disposable earnings, were found to be the top three most affordable local authority districts in the UK.

    Across the UK, mortgage payments have nearly halved as a proportion of income from their 2007 peak of 48pc, as house prices have dropped along with mortgage rates.

    On a regional basis, Scotland has the most affordable homes in the last quarter of 2011, with mortgage payments accounting for 20pc of disposable earnings, compared with London where payments make up 35pc of take home pay.

    Yorkshire and Humberside and Northern Ireland are also areas where mortgage payments were more affordable, averaging 21pc of earnings, while payments in the South East are typically 33pc.

    Lenders have been offering some of their cheapest deals as the Bank of England maintains the base rate at a historic 0.5% low, and Halifax said this increased affordability has helped to prop up demand in the tough market by alleviating the squeeze on household budgets.

    Martin Ellis, housing economist at Halifax, said: “The falls in house prices and cuts in mortgage rates in the last few years have resulted in a significant improvement in housing affordability for those able to raise the necessary deposit to enter the market.

    “Mortgage payments for a typical new borrower are now at their lowest in proportion to earnings since 1997.

    “The marked improvement in affordability was a key factor supporting housing demand in 2011.

    “The prospect of an exceptionally low Bank of England base rate over the foreseeable future should maintain affordability at favourable levels in 2012.

    “This should support the market over the coming 12 months, helping to offset the impact of the downward pressures on demand from the ongoing difficulties faced by households regarding their finances and uncertainty about economic prospects.”

    Despite deals becoming more affordable, concerns have been raised that borrowers will face a greater struggle to meet tightened lending criteria this year, despite the wider availability of innovative deals.

    Earlier this month, the Bank of England predicted that lenders would increase their mortgage ranges further, but cautioned that this would be offset by tougher lending rules.

    Fears have also been raised by estate agents that current low transaction levels will be affected further when the stamp duty holiday for first-time buyers ends this spring.

    Visit Telegraph Mortgage Services for free mortgage advice

     

    23 comments

    • caesar  •  Kampala, Uganda  •  3 months ago
      The essence of government interventions in all this economic crisis world over is to balance the gap between the poor majority and the rich minority from more taxes on the rich in America to what some calls using the savings of the rich to offer long term mortgage facilities to the low income earner to leave them with some disposable income where is this all leading us to in the long run. The China model !!! hope we leave for the next 100 yrs . Equitable distribution of resources to all is where i see this heading.
    • Hephaestus  •  Ilford, England  •  4 months ago
      Now some advice from a total non-expert! Sit tight, whatever you're doing; renting, paying a mortgage or living with parents! Now is NOT the time to be coerced into a 25 year commitment; the experts can't predict a week in advance let alone 5 years, but that won't matter to them once you've taken out a large mortgage and they've trousered a large commission!
    • Carl  •  4 months ago
      Nothing but lies as usual, the housing market still has so much pain ahead, interest rates on the floor and it is still broken, many houses have been on the market for more than a year without a viewing, the news does not represent real life these days it is constant fiction
    • Matthew  •  4 months ago
      BROKEN BRITAIN AGAIN!
    • Mark  •  Middlesbrough, England  •  4 months ago
      Fantastic. So you have to get in hock to pay £200'000 mortgage on a property that is really worth about £80'000 As the capitalist economic system bleeds to death as all the vested interests take the Bite out of its carcass
      • Davy 4 months ago
        Yep. If a house bought 30 years ago for £2k now worth £200k. If it had gone up with rate of inflation, would be worth approx £80k now....
      • michael 4 months ago
        Since when have house prices had any relation to inflation? It's all about where properties are. In some areas a property that was 2k 30 years ago is less than 80k now. It's about demand, a property is a commodity.
    • Henry Goodridge  •  Bedale, England  •  4 months ago
      Its not surprising that mortgages are cheap as borrowers are effectively being subsidised by UK savers!
      • Super Alan 4 months ago
        Indeed to save the Banks bad and high risk property assets and support B2L taking away ore supply, to keep ouse prices Up... it is that simple.. This is the strategy of Grant Schapps and Mervyn... ;o)
    • Thestrawthatbrokethecamel ...  •  Manchester, England  •  4 months ago
      Remember: This research note is by the Halifax. They need to put a postive spin on the housing market and thereby mortgage provision. Also note that the final line of the piece promotes the Telegraph Mortgage Service. Sorry to say this: prices are self evidently too high. Consequently, property is currently a bad investment! Lots of downside yet to come. Sometime though, with falling prices homes will be affordable in large enough numbers to entice enough first time buyers onto the first rung of the ladder. Result, he market will normalise.
    • M.YASS  •  Colchester, England  •  4 months ago
      Property prices (2 bedroom terrace) in Essex are about 80k. I wonder whether these prices are affordable to people who have a job?
      • Davy 4 months ago
        Try 170k where I live in Gloucestershire
      • SpawnyWhippet 3 months ago
        Try 800k in Sydney, with higher taxes and the same salary
    • MICHAEL  •  3 months ago
      it doesn't matter how cheap a mortgage is if you haven't got a secure job or sufficient money saved for a deposit or can live long enough to pay it back. The only ones with enough money are the bankers and they can afford to buy their houses outright
    • Peter  •  Clermont-Ferrand, France  •  4 months ago
      The cost of mortgage payments relative to earnings may have fallen, but house prices relative to earnings have not. In fact, according to a recent "Times" report, median house prices rose to an amount seven times that of median earnings in 2010 (i.e., compared with three-and-a-half times in the mid-nineties). Until this ratio falls to a more sustainable level, large swathes of potential first-time buyers will continue to be excluded from the market, whatever spin is put on the facts by those in the industry with vested interests.
    • dave  •  Fatih, Turkey  •  3 months ago
      How about this guys and gals, a brand new 3 bed semi, 2 bath, with ground floor wash room, from £ 50,000 to £60,000, if your old enough to be able to sell up and move to Turkey, 2 and 3 bed apartments from £25 000 and all near the sea, food for thought, plus cost of living very cheap, look up adds in Voices newspaper Didim Turkey, if your tempted get to know the scams from Brit residents in local bars before buying !!
    • Huw_Wales  •  3 months ago
      How much deposit do you have to put down, 15,20 or 30% ???

      How can you save money in the current financial climate with fuel prices going through the roof and inflation bouncing around, whilst cutting your cloth to it's length. Not easy, if at all possible. The young ones have totally had it :(
    • Davy  •  London, England  •  4 months ago
      If you can get a mortgage that is!
    • paul b  •  St Albans, England  •  4 months ago
      what's the point no 1 can get 1 get a mortage.
    • colin  •  4 months ago
      most affordable for 14 years,for who?
      • Pete 3 months ago
        those that have got a mortgage not newcomers or new buyers.
    • Super Alan  •  Manchester, England  •  4 months ago
      How appalling... this is an AdverTorial to continue the Great UK House Price Scam... saying the avg mortgage is 27% of the avg income is avg rubbish... when rates go up which they Must it will be significantly higher then... so this is extremely misleading article.

      Its sole aim is indebtedness of the masses to prop up Property portfolios and the evils of B2L.

      More affordable social housing (over 1,000,000 empty homes left as sleeping assets or forgotten about) is needed to take away the demand, more house building (force builders to build on approved brown field sites and save the Green belt, Tax Land approved for) building not use,) higher CGTaxes on B2L with limits on ownership restricted to a max of 2homes, and strict rent controls are the only way forward for a sustainable future.

      Suggest people support the many e-Petitions on the Govt wbeb site to regulate and limit B2L and save yr childrens futures......
      • Hephaestus 4 months ago
        Well spoken Alan, articles such as these should come with a "wealth warning" (or better still, a label of "liars charter" attached
      • michael 4 months ago
        Buy to let has become essential as the governments over the passed decades have failed to replace the council houses that they sold off cheap on the 'right-to-buy' policy.
    • michael  •  Dubai, United Arab Emirates  •  4 months ago
      As much as banks and building societies were happy to see house prices increase at the rate they did between '98 to '07 as they receive more interest on the bigger mortgage loans being taken, we all still have to look at the general public that bought and sold these properties. We bought, we sold, we encouraged and set the prices. It's easy to blame governments, beurocracy and banks, but it was the people who were free to decide if they wanted to involve themselves in this market. Then too many people treated their homes as a cash cow, re-mortgaging to pay off credit cards, loans, holidays etc. For those who did that and are either now in difficulty or have been repossessed, I have no sympathy. For those in genuine difficulty, there are options with your lender. A generation ago, people worked hard, saved their deposits, did not get into debt and eventually got their mortgage. Those days are back! So lift up your chin, stop blaming everyone else and then you can have your home. Just measure your expectations to reality!
    • FREDERICK  •  London, England  •  3 months ago
      Have a look at what has happened in Southern Ireland , Property is still grossly overpriced
      As Thatcher once said let market forces prevail,
      UK Home owners have already lost billions and some cannot even sell their homes
      The bankers and Financiers will still want their pound of flesh and bonuses
      The boom balloon has burst, The plutocrats who caused the problem cannot solve it
      also rents are static or cheaper
    • dks  •  4 months ago
      yes mortgages are most affordable at the moment but no one can get one, if i had to buy my house now i would not be able to get a mortgage when i brought my house it cost £59995.00 i was earning around & £33000.00 a year 17 years later i am still on much the same income doing the same job but my house would cost in excess of £420000.00 work that one out.the 1st time buyers and youngsters dont stand a chance, i am no better off than if my house was only worth the same as i paid for it unless i sold & moved out of my area i would only be paying more for the next house
    • the harbinger  •  4 months ago
      #$%$ end of utter #$%$ and lies!