Why Get a Home Equity Loan?

Why Get a Home Equity Loan?

Why Get a Home Equity Loan?By: Hunter Lending Team
Published on: 27/08/2024

If you're a homeowner, chances are that you've been deluged with offers from finance companies to lend you money based on the equity you have invested in your home. A home equity loan is a loan extended to you that is secured by your home.

Mortgage Blogs
Mortgage Lenders – Your Options

Mortgage Lenders – Your Options

Mortgage Lenders – Your OptionsBy: Hunter Lending Team
Published on: 27/08/2024

Finding your dream home is usually the simplest part of the house buying process! Once you see somewhere you want to put in an offer for, you’ll want to move fast. It helps, therefore, to have your mortgage sorted before you find somewhere you want to buy. You can choose a lender and mortgage, apply for the loan and get your mortgage ‘approved on principle’ before you even start looking for a house. This means that you know what your budget will be and can be fairly certai...

Mortgage Blogs
Making UK Mortgages More Accessible

Making UK Mortgages More Accessible

Making UK Mortgages More AccessibleBy: Hunter Lending Team
Published on: 23/08/2024

Previously, in the UK, if you wanted to apply for a mortgage to buy a new home, the amount that would be lent to you would be automatically tied to how much money you earned. With runaway UK housing prices over the last decade, and with incomes remaining fairly stable, this method of calculating how much you could borrow on a mortgage has become out dated. Today, many new home buyers need to look for more creative ways to borrow money if they want to buy a new home in Britain...

Mortgage Blogs
Refinancing Your Mortgage After Bankruptcy

Refinancing Your Mortgage After Bankruptcy

Refinancing Your Mortgage After BankruptcyBy: Hunter Lending Team
Published on: 22/08/2024

It is a general conception that getting a refinance loan after filing a bankruptcy is quite difficult. But you can avail a home loan provided you pay the interest at a slightly higher rate. Generally, lenders do not prefer taking the risk of offering mortgages to someone who has filed bankruptcy. But there are the subprime lenders who can offer you loans at higher interest rates, sometimes even after six months of finalizing your bankruptcy.

Mortgage Blogs