If:
- You can’t afford to buy a house on the open market
- You are a British, EU or EEA citizen or have ‘indefinite leave to remain’ in the UK
- You have a permanent contract of employment and not within a probationary period
- You have at least two years’ of audited accounts if you are self employed
- Your income fits affordability for the property you wish to buy
- You must meet the mortgage lenders criteria to obtain a mortgage for the agreed share percentage and value
- You have savings to cover the mortgage deposit plus approximately £3,000 for legal, survey and mortgage fees
Check any possible stamp duty fees with your solicitor at the time of purchase.
If you don’t need a mortgage to purchase your share you will need enough funds to cover the above costs, less the mortgage fees.
- Serving military personnel and those honorably discharged in the last two years
- General Needs housing tenants - who vacant a property to move into a shared ownership home
- People already living and/or working locally and those with a close family local connection
Close family connection = parents, adult children, brothers or sisters who have been resident in the local area for the past 5 years - People with a housing need
If:
- You aren’t a British, EU or EEA citizen, or your passport is not stamped with ‘indefinite leave to remain’ or you are not entitled to use public funds
- You can’t prove that you can raise a mortgage with an acceptable lender and afford to keep a home in the longer term
- You have a county court judgement (CCJ) registered against you, unless this has been satisfied (paid back) two years prior to application
- Your defaults must have been settled for at least two years prior to application
- You have a household income of more than £80,000 a year
- You have had a home repossessed within six years prior to application
- You have any mortgage arrears in the past 12 months
- You have negative equity which you cannot resolve with your lender (negative equity means that you owe more money to a mortgage lender than your property is actually worth)
- You already own a home you cannot or will not sell
- You have been made bankrupt/had an IVA (Involuntary Arrangement) and have not been discharged for at least three years
- You are self-employed and don’t have audited accounts for the last two full years, or copies of your last two years tax returns