I’m not saying don’t do it but be very careful. Do your sums and bear in mind that you could live to a very old age which is what equity release companies hope for. The longer you live the more money they make, especially in the later years.
Equity release seems pretty pointless unless you have a specific need for a lump sum for a project and can take it under an agreement that lets you make repayments. If you are cash poor to start with, how would you make the repayments?
Taking a lifetime mortgage when bank rates are high is expensive.
Equity release schemes charge interest above the bank rate and the interest is compounded.
If you borrow to invest, to provide extra income, you will be accumulating more interest than you can earn.
Current information on equity release says the minimum you can borrow is £10,000. The best rate you can get currently is 5.34%. Best easy access savings rate (according to moneysavingsexpert) is 5.1%.
Say you borrowed £10,000, invested it in an easy access account and withdrew £1,000 a year to cover living costs. By the end of year five you would already owe £12,971 i.e. £2,971 interest already accumulated but you would only have earned interest of £2,040. Already £931 out of pocket.
Carry on doing that for ten years until all of the £10,000 is spent and you will owe £16,824 but will only have earned £2,804. You will now be out of pocket by £4,019. A very costly £10,000 already.
The debt will go on accumulating interest until you die or go into care, upon which you are usually required to repay the loan within twelve months or on the sale of your home whichever is sooner.
After 20 years you will owe £28,305 on that £10,000 initial release. £18,305 interest on just £10,000.
And you could have been exposed to reductions in the savings rate so you may not have earned as much at £2,804.
By contrast, the rate charged on equity release usually remains fixed at the inital rate unless the terms of your agreement allow you to negotiate a lower rate.
Looked at another way, it wouldn’t be a huge amount to repay compared to the sale proceeds of an average house but it is a very expensive way to borrow £10,000.
And that sum may not last very long if your pension is already not keeping up with the cost of living and fiscal drag starts to bite … and so you go back to borrow more.