Brendan Burgess
Founder
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This comes up a lot and the Key Posts are old and tend to involve negative equity.
Summary of the process by way of example
John and Mary own a house jointly but have split up. John is happy to transfer his share of the house to Mary.
House value: €300k
Mortgage: €260k so 87% Loan to Value
Although there is €40k equity in the house, John does not want his share which would be €20k.
Stages
1) Mary applies to the lender or any lender for a new mortgage of €280k in her own name.
2) John's solicitor will draw up the sale of the property to Mary.
3) Mary's solicitor and it has to be a separate one will process the purchase like any other house purchase.
John can't "just take his name off the mortgage" or "just take his name off the title deeds"
It is very important that Mary tries to buy John out formally and legally so that he has no further claim. They should not just reach an informal understanding that "she will pay the mortgage and own the house."
John must transfer ownership to Mary if possible. They could fall out later and he could claim that he still owns the house. He might not succeed, but Mary would have great difficulty and expense if she ever wanted to sell the house.
Likewise John does not want to be on the mortgage for two reasons:
Summary of the process by way of example
John and Mary own a house jointly but have split up. John is happy to transfer his share of the house to Mary.
House value: €300k
Mortgage: €260k so 87% Loan to Value
Although there is €40k equity in the house, John does not want his share which would be €20k.
Stages
1) Mary applies to the lender or any lender for a new mortgage of €280k in her own name.
2) John's solicitor will draw up the sale of the property to Mary.
3) Mary's solicitor and it has to be a separate one will process the purchase like any other house purchase.
John can't "just take his name off the mortgage" or "just take his name off the title deeds"
It is very important that Mary tries to buy John out formally and legally so that he has no further claim. They should not just reach an informal understanding that "she will pay the mortgage and own the house."
John must transfer ownership to Mary if possible. They could fall out later and he could claim that he still owns the house. He might not succeed, but Mary would have great difficulty and expense if she ever wanted to sell the house.
Likewise John does not want to be on the mortgage for two reasons:
- Other lenders will see it as his liability and it will limit his ability to take out a mortgage himself if he wants to buy a house
- If Mary goes into arrears, John's credit record will be damaged.