Guarantor Mortgages: Get On The Ladder With Family Support

Borrow more with a smaller deposit when a parent or family member acts as your guarantor. We'll protect everyone involved.

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What Is a Guarantor Mortgage?

A guarantor mortgage allows you to borrow money to buy a home, with a parent or family member guaranteeing the loan. If you can’t make payments, your guarantor becomes responsible.

Why they exist

Traditional lenders want large deposits and perfect credit histories. Guarantor mortgages recognise that many young buyers have stable incomes but haven’t had time to save huge deposits or build extensive credit files.

Who benefits

The key difference

Unlike gifted deposits (where parents give you money), guarantors pledge their property or savings as security without handing over cash upfront. 

Is a Guarantor Mortgage Right for You?

Not sure if you qualify or whether this is the best route to homeownership? Let's have a no-obligation conversation about your situation and explore all your options.

How Guarantor Mortgages Work

Three common structures

Property Security

Your guarantor pledges their own property (usually mortgage-free or with substantial equity) as additional security. The lender has a legal charge against both your property and theirs.

Savings Security

Your guarantor places savings (typically 10-20% of your mortgage amount) in a locked savings account as security. The money stays there for 3-5 years or until you've built sufficient equity. Your guarantor earns interest during this time.

Income Boost

Your guarantor's income is added to yours when calculating affordability. This lets you borrow more based on combined incomes, though they're liable if you miss payments.

Protection for guarantors

  • Clear legal documentation explaining their responsibilities
  • Ability to be released once you’ve built sufficient equity (typically 75-80% LTV)
  • Regular statements showing the mortgage status
  • Options for guarantors to take over payments rather than face property sale

Typical terms

  • Borrow up to 100% of property value (though 90-95% is more common)
  • Fixed or variable rate options
  • Guarantor released after 2-5 years if equity and payment history are strong
  • Standard mortgage terms (25-35 years)

See How Much You Could Borrow

With a guarantor backing your mortgage, you could borrow significantly more than on your own. Answer a few quick questions and we'll show you your potential buying power.

Who Can Be a Guarantor?

Typical requirements

  • Usually a parent or close family member (sibling, grandparent)
  • Must be under 75-80 at the end of the mortgage term
  • Needs sufficient income or assets to cover potential payments
  • Usually requires homeownership or substantial savings
  • Must pass affordability assessments
  • Resident in the UK

Not suitable if:

Your potential guarantor:

  • Is already stretched financially
  • Needs access to their savings in the near term
  • Is approaching retirement with fixed income
  • Has dependents relying on their financial security
  • Doesn’t fully understand the commitment

Our guarantor assessment

We don’t just look at whether you qualify—we assess whether being a guarantor is right for your family member. This is a significant commitment and everyone must be comfortable.

Protect Your Family, Get Expert Guidance

Guarantor mortgages involve your family's financial security. We ensure everyone understands the commitment and structure the arrangement to protect all parties. Book a consultation where we can talk through your specific family situation.

The Reality Check

For Buyers

Guarantor mortgages are a privilege, not a right. Approach them with gratitude and responsibility:

  • Make every payment on time
  • Keep your guarantor informed of your financial situation
  • Work toward releasing them from the guarantee as quickly as possible
  • Consider overpaying to build equity faster

For Guarantors

This is serious. If your child/family member can’t pay:

  • You must make the payments or risk losing your home
  • It could impact your own borrowing ability
  • It may affect your retirement plans
  • Relationships can become strained under financial pressure

 

Our Role

We ensure both parties understand the risks and benefits. We’ve seen guarantor arrangements work beautifully, but only when everyone is realistic and committed.

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Explore Safer Alternatives First

A guarantor mortgage isn't the only way family can help. We'll review gifted deposits, JBSP mortgages, and family offset options to find the structure that works best for your situation—with the least risk.

Alternatives to Consider

Before committing to a guarantor mortgage, consider:

Gifted Deposit

If your parents can afford it, gifting a deposit (with no repayment expectation) might be simpler and less risky for them.

Joint Borrower Sole Proprietor (JBSP)

Parents go on the mortgage but not the property title. They share the debt but you own the home outright. Can be more tax-efficient.

Living Together

Buying with parents on both the mortgage and title, with clear legal agreements about ownership shares.

Family Offset Mortgages

Parents keep their savings in a linked account that offsets your mortgage interest, reducing your payments without risking their capital.

 

We’ll explore all options and recommend the structure that best protects everyone.

Guarantor Mortgage FAQs

Will being a guarantor affect my parents' credit?

The mortgage appears on their credit file, which could affect their borrowing capacity. However, if all payments are made on time, there’s no negative impact.

Yes, most lenders allow guarantor release once you’ve reached a certain LTV (usually 75-80%) and maintained good payment history for 2-3 years.

You can sell normally. Proceeds pay off the mortgage and your guarantor is released from their obligation.

Absolutely. The guarantor provides additional security, making lenders more comfortable with self-employed income.

Yes. Guarantors must have independent legal advice before signing. This protects them and ensures they understand the commitment.

This is why clear documentation and realistic expectations matter. Legal agreements are binding regardless of personal relationships. We recommend families discuss “what if” scenarios before proceeding.

Is a Guarantor Mortgage Right for Your Family?

Let's discuss your situation and explore whether a guarantor mortgage—or an alternative structure—makes sense.

Related Links:

Joint Borrower Sole Proprietor Mortgages →​