Mortgage prisoners could stay trapped by EU directive

Thanks to an EU directive, people needing to remortgage will have to undergo affordability checks if they try to switch lenders – meaning that a number of so-called mortgage prisoners will remain trapped.

The Mortgage Credit Directive could particularly hit people going into retirement, who took out interest-only deals and who have no means of repaying their debt unless they remortgage or downsize. It has been dubbed the mortgage time bomb.

The directive over-rules arrangements made in the UK by the Financial Conduct Authority.

When the Mortgage Market Review was introduced almost a year ago, the FCA said that “trapped” borrowers would not have to undergo the checks as long as they did not want to borrow more money and had a good payment history.

However, the FCA has now said that it is having to withdraw its arrangements “as they are not [Mortgage Credit Directive] compliant”.

Robert Sinclair, chief executive of the Association of Mortgage Intermediaries, said: “This is an issue where European legislation has made it worse for UK consumers – there is no doubt about that.”

The transitional arrangements were originally introduced because of fears of a ‘mortgage time bomb’, with a number of borrowers on interest-only loans and no means of paying them off unless they switched to a product that included capital repayment.

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3 Comments

  1. marcH

    Another bonkers directive from Europe ! Why on earth have we accepted to apply this nonsense to our financial sector when we have the FCA ? Doesn’t this now make the FCA redundant ? And is this directive  supposed to protect the lender or borrower ? Can’t we just let them get on with it without nanny Europe looking over their shoulder?

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  2. Proper Agent

    Do we not have enough common sense in this country to make our own rulings, laws and policies? Let’s just get out of there.

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  3. agentx

    And Europe is full of long term renters? UKIP it is then.

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