
Originally Posted by
5ive
C'mon dude, you were gifted a rung on the ladder...
I'd step back and stop blowing that trumpet, you've had it a lot easier, and done a lot less than others have done/are doing.
Gifted is a very long stretch - I still have to pay a 100% mortgage (if I had an actual cash deposit of 20%, my mortgage payments drop by $200-$300 a fortnight)
The reality is that if your family own a house, and they go guarantor on the deposit - is it such a risk to them:
lets assume a 20% deposit on a 600K house - that $120,000 worth of risk that they are taking on. Seems a lot doesn't it? However - Factor in this, if you pay your mortgage consistently, you will typically only need to wait up to 5 years before the payments you have made AND the appreciation of your house value means that you have enough equity in the house to take them off as Guarantor (even less in some suburbs, for example if the house prices continue, I will be taking my guarantor off at the 3 year mark). Factor in House insurance (compulsory for a Mortgage) and Life and Income protection insurance - it is virtually a risk-free gamble.
Now - you say I had it easier - I call BS. When I first looked at getting a Mortgage, all the banks I spoke to told me the same thing: No deposit, no Mortgage. At that point I could have stopped and I would have been in the same boat as everyone who was crying about Auckland house prices then.
But this is where I differed - I had decided I needed a house (in order to raise a family) and so it was a high priority for me to make it happen. Cue some googling and some research and I found that I could get a Guarantor on JUST the deposit (not the entire Mortgage)
So, I went back to the banks and they said that yes it was a possibility, but they would need to get independant legal advise and there would be risks (the Doom and Gloom speach and standard corporate waivers) etc.
If you want to believe that my farts smell like roses and I clicked my fingers and got a house, then more power to you. The reality is that I had to put in additional hard work to find a solution to getting a house. I then had to take extra measures to ensure that I could mitigate any risks for the Guarantor (as listed above) - measures which I pay for.
These options are open to me in much the same way they are open to anyone who has family that owns a house.
Physics; Thou art a cruel, heartless Bitch-of-a-Mistress
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