Calculator for mortgage amount from monthly repayment?
Calculator for mortgage amount from monthly repayment?
Author
Discussion

MitchT

Original Poster:

17,089 posts

232 months

Saturday 25th February 2017
quotequote all
Does anyone know if there's a "reverse" mortgage calculator that will tell you the amount you can borrow based on you inputting the monthly repayment that you want to make? All I can find when I search is the type of calculator that tells you what the monthly repayment will be based on you putting in the loan amount. The OH and I want to know what kind of ball park we're looking at, price wise, for houses. Obviously we can just keep typing different amounts in the loan amount field but I'd have thought in this day and age someone would have come up with what I'm looking for.

Royce44

395 posts

136 months

Pothole

34,367 posts

305 months

Saturday 25th February 2017
quotequote all

MitchT

Original Poster:

17,089 posts

232 months

Saturday 25th February 2017
quotequote all
Pothole said:
Google is amazing!
Yeah, OK sarcy, I tried Google but obviously clicked the wrong results. tongue out

Thanks - the one called "your total mortgage" is what I was looking for.

wiggy001

7,011 posts

294 months

Monday 27th February 2017
quotequote all
OP I'm sure you are already aware of this but you need to use a mortgage affordability calculator to work out roughly what a lender will lend you, rather than what you think you can afford. The 2 might not be the same. Go on the site for one of the big lenders (eg Nationwide) and see what they'd be prepared to lend based on your circumstances.

p1stonhead

28,627 posts

190 months

Monday 27th February 2017
quotequote all
MitchT said:
Pothole said:
Google is amazing!
Yeah, OK sarcy, I tried Google but obviously clicked the wrong results. tongue out

Thanks - the one called "your total mortgage" is what I was looking for.
OP this isnt accurate. Based on what I can afford to pay (i.e instead of putting it in savings) it says I can borrow £950k which is miles above what I actually can.

As said above, go to Nationwide's site and itll be more accurate as it takes your circumstances into account much better.

MitchT

Original Poster:

17,089 posts

232 months

Monday 27th February 2017
quotequote all
wiggy001 said:
OP I'm sure you are already aware of this but you need to use a mortgage affordability calculator to work out roughly what a lender will lend you, rather than what you think you can afford.
Yes, I'm well aware of that. We're currently paying £650/month rent and wondered what loan amount would equate to £650/month mortgage repayments. We did approach a lender a while ago for a full assessment and the amount we were told we could borrow had repayments well in excess of £650/month to repay, so it's not that we wouldn't be allowed it as we already have paperwork saying we will, we just don't want to get mortgaged up to the eyeballs purely because the bank will let us. Hence focusing on a modest monthly outlay and wanting to know what loan amount it would equate to.

p1stonhead said:
OP this isnt accurate. Based on what I can afford to pay (i.e instead of putting it in savings) it says I can borrow £950k which is miles above what I actually can.
Ditto my above reply.

CHARLESBERG

157 posts

125 months

Monday 27th February 2017
quotequote all
I have just attempted to private message you mate (never done it before so hopefully it worked!).

You may need to check you emails.

Steve Evil

10,801 posts

252 months

Monday 27th February 2017
quotequote all
Another thing to bear in mind is that you can play with the length of term, obviously depending on how long you're comfortable with paying for, but factor in that your incomes will likely increase over time and you'll have more to put in, overpaying to bring down the term etc.

£650pm over 35 years will get you into a bigger house than £650pm over 25 years is what I'm trying to say.

lufbramatt

5,545 posts

157 months

Monday 27th February 2017
quotequote all
Wouldn't it also depend on how big a deposit you have, as this will affect the loan to value ratio- lower ratio will allow you to get a lower interest rate and the repayments will be cheaper.

MitchT

Original Poster:

17,089 posts

232 months

Monday 27th February 2017
quotequote all
CHARLESBERG said:
I have just attempted to private message you mate (never done it before so hopefully it worked!).

You may need to check you emails.
Cheers - got it!

MitchT

Original Poster:

17,089 posts

232 months

Monday 27th February 2017
quotequote all
lufbramatt said:
Wouldn't it also depend on how big a deposit you have, as this will affect the loan to value ratio- lower ratio will allow you to get a lower interest rate and the repayments will be cheaper.
Of course. We were just looking for a ballpark figure.

turbobloke

115,667 posts

283 months

Monday 27th February 2017
quotequote all
Royce44 said:
Good link and good stuff in answer to the OP, but that MSE webpage isn't quite right. In answer to my hypothetical mortgage enquiry it says that the result depends on your credit score. They really should explain what that means (see below).

No lender sees your reference agency 'Credit Score' which is an entity sold to consumers by the Credit industry.

Lenders see your credit file, which for individuals not lenders often comes along with a Credit Score that you would need to divulge to make the score known to a lender. Even this credit file is less comprehensive than the report that credit reference agencies have in the past supplied/sold to consumers. That more detailed report may not be complete either as some lenders and some other info may be absent.

A consumer won't know exactly what a specific lender takes into account, and how (weightings etc), when applying for credit. Adverts for loans sometimes ask 'is your credit score...' with a range of options, and unless you tell them they won't know. Online material says things like 'your credit score is used by lenders to help determine whether or not...' but in reality each lender scores you differently and secretly and this reference to a credit score by MSE above is the lender's score using their own methodology not the agency's score.

All of this is available if you look, and if you speak to somebody higher up the food chain than a call centre usually provides (no disrespect to call centre staff, their permissions are limited). Just sayin'.

ashleyman

7,227 posts

122 months

Monday 27th February 2017
quotequote all
I was looking at houses last night and it's depressing. I'll probably never own a house unless I move North from London..

AlmostUseful

3,318 posts

223 months

Monday 27th February 2017
quotequote all
ashleyman said:
I was looking at houses last night and it's depressing. I'll probably never own a house unless I move North from London..
Alternatively, buy the smallest house you can in London, scrimp and save all that you can, and then once you've paid if off you can move up north and buy a village. perfect.