Quizzes & Puzzles9 mins ago
Hmo Vs Tenants Vs Lodgers
13 Answers
Hi hoping for some advice pls:
We own our home (still mortgaged) and as we’ve not been able to sell it (on market for ages ) we are thinking of renting it out. It has 4 bedrooms. 3 bathrooms (but only one of those is en-suite)
We have a few ideas we are considering:
1) renting it out as one full property (ie a “normal” rental)
2) taking on 3 or 4 lodgers and us not living in the prop at all.
3) taking on 2 or 3 lodgers and ya retaining our own bedroom so we can come back to this house on weekends only (we wld be working in another county)
What are the advantages and disadvantages in your opinions?
We would also have to let mortgage provider know of course and can any of you see any reason our mortgage provider may not agree to allow us to do this?
We will also let our home insurance know obv.
We want to be legal and above board but really need to do something as property just isn’t selling.
We own our home (still mortgaged) and as we’ve not been able to sell it (on market for ages ) we are thinking of renting it out. It has 4 bedrooms. 3 bathrooms (but only one of those is en-suite)
We have a few ideas we are considering:
1) renting it out as one full property (ie a “normal” rental)
2) taking on 3 or 4 lodgers and us not living in the prop at all.
3) taking on 2 or 3 lodgers and ya retaining our own bedroom so we can come back to this house on weekends only (we wld be working in another county)
What are the advantages and disadvantages in your opinions?
We would also have to let mortgage provider know of course and can any of you see any reason our mortgage provider may not agree to allow us to do this?
We will also let our home insurance know obv.
We want to be legal and above board but really need to do something as property just isn’t selling.
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The Mortgage Company has really got you by the short and curlies, and also may be concerned that deterioration of the already apparently unsellable property might reduce its value below the outstanding equity.
We have one or two law experts in the AB membership, and I expect they will be along some time with more professional answers.
We have one or two law experts in the AB membership, and I expect they will be along some time with more professional answers.
1 and 2 would require informing your mortgage co and prob changing to buy to let.
3 is interesting. You would effectively be just having lodgers and may not need to change mortgages.
1 and 2 would require assured shorthold tenancy agreements and deposits and then difficulty getting tenants out. 3 would not be an ast it's a simple licence and much easier to shift awkward lodgers.
3 is interesting. You would effectively be just having lodgers and may not need to change mortgages.
1 and 2 would require assured shorthold tenancy agreements and deposits and then difficulty getting tenants out. 3 would not be an ast it's a simple licence and much easier to shift awkward lodgers.
TY barmaid and canary for your replies. Not even decided if we deffo gonna do this. It’s just an idea that we looking into. Canary the mortgage co unlikely to know it’s “unsellable” as they wldnt even know it’s been on market surely? The difficulty (according to the agents at least) is that our property is at the very top of the price range for this area and so it’s harder to sell. Whether or not that’s an excuse or not we won’t know of course.
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