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  • We've found ourselves in a strange and very privileged position which allows me to ask a very golf club question:

    We are have a date set for exchange and completion and a mortgage offer, but I also just got some money through which means that, using our existing savings and equity from our sale, we could just afford to buy the house outright as cash buyers, and pay the solicitor's fees and SDLT. This would leave us with no savings, but also no monthly outgoings, which would mean that we could pay for smaller immediate jobs we know we would need - flooring, radiators, paint - on credit cards.

    Later, when we want to do the bigger jobs (extension with kitchen, new bathroom), we could take out a mortgage and start paying it off then.

    Alternatively, we could take out the mortgage we have agreed which is on a decent rate until the end of October, which would keep our savings intact until we needed the work doing, and also means we could maybe get some slightly bigger jobs done in the meantime.

    The downside of this is we're paying monthly from the off, and after October it will go up even more. And also there's a danger that, seeing as we can access more of our money, we might overspend money we'd ideally need for future works.

    What would you do?

  • You say the mortgage is a decent rate - what is the rate and fees for taking it out?

  • could you plop the lump sum into a savings account that has a higher rate than the mortgage? if yes - in theory that’s more bang for your buck.

    that said, i’d be in camp ‘no mortage, thanks’ just as i’m somewhat more risk averse (though bad at it)

  • Offset mortgage

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