Cillifan Euity release will not be for the full value of the house either. Remember, the lender is lending the money to you and rolling up the interest, they have also got to estimate how much house prices will rise in the period over which they lend you the money because they want there to be enough money when your house is finally sold, that they get the money and interest back.
Let me give you an example. Let us assume that your house is worth £250,000. Current interest rates for euity release are between 6.5-9%.
Let us use an interest rate of 7%. Supposing that an euity release company decided to lend you half the value of your house, £125,000. Let us assume you take the loan out when you are 65 and you die when you are 85, that is 20 years,
By the time you die, the money your estate will owe the lender will be approximately £450,000. In the past 20 years house prices have risn by 75%. So assuming the same going forward, in 20 years your house couldl be worth about £440,000, but it could be more, it could be less. That final value will be too close for the lender, so I suspect that they would not lend you more than £100,000 and may not lend to you at all because, uite simply given that in fact you could live another 30 years or more, they will consider that the potential mortgage term is too long for them to risk.
Remember the lender will be looking at you and your house and deciding what they think it is safe to lend you to be sure they get all their money back when you die. They are the ones that decide whether to lend to you and how much they will lend you.
As things stand at the moment you are actually a bad risk.