Classify as first time buyer ?

Roro999

Registered User
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My son is thinking of buying a doer upper cottage for 100k for his PPR. If he uses his savings to buy it and sells it in a few years time to acquire a bigger house with a mortgage does he lose his first time buyer status or does first time buyer status apply when he takes out his first mortgage ?
 
For the purpose of the Central Bank's rules what is relevant is whether he is a first-time borrower or not, not a first time buyer.

See here:


 
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Now I read that the Central Bank defines a FTB as someone who has never taken out a housing loan. So he would be a FTB.
 
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Now I read that the Central Bank defines a FTB as someone who has never taken out a housing loan. So he would be a FTB.
He would be a FTB from a mortgage perspective, as he's never had a home loan, so 10% deposit etc. However, for all other purposes he is no longer a FTB, so would not be eligible for schemes like Help to Buy etc,
 
He would be a FTB from a mortgage perspective, as he's never had a home loan, so 10% deposit etc. However, for all other purposes he is no longer a FTB, so would not be eligible for schemes like Help to Buy etc,
Thanks for clarification on this.
 
He would be a FTB from a mortgage perspective, as he's never had a home loan, so 10% deposit etc. However, for all other purposes he is no longer a FTB, so would not be eligible for schemes like Help to Buy etc,
How would help to buy work say in five years time and assume my son gets married and there is a joint application one of which has not previously owned a home ?
 
How would help to buy work say in five years time and assume my son gets married and there is a joint application one of which has not previously owned a home ?
If either party in a couple jointly buying a residential property has previously owned one, then they are not FTBs for that purpose.
 
He could declare himself bankrupt & wait 3 years, or get married & then get a divorce and then become a first time buyer again under new rules can't he?
 
I think the criteria to qualify for exemptions in the Central Bank's macro-prudential rules.

But getting married and divorced and/or achieving bankruptcy is not how I'd attempt to qualify.....
Yes, a long winded way to qualify for something he already qualifies for...