I forgot to tell my mortgage provider I’m letting my property?

I forgot to tell my mortgage provider I’m letting my property?

11:25 AM, 18th October 2022, About 2 years ago 12

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We have a residential mortgage from Barclays which does allow us to let our property during our fixed term with no rate increase. My husband got offered a job abroad and we have consequently moved to Norway.

We let our property out through a letting agent and we have landlords insurance. But.. we forgot to tell Barclays … its been 2 yrs now!!

Having realised our error, we have now asked for the consent to let forms BUT should we say it’s been so long or should we just notify them as if it has just started ???

How much trouble can we be in?

Helsbels


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Comments

Neil Patterson

11:28 AM, 18th October 2022, About 2 years ago

Barclays only needs to do a voters roll cheque and they would find out, so I would be upfront with your mistake straight away.

Howard Reuben Cert CII (MP) CeRER

14:23 PM, 18th October 2022, About 2 years ago

As a mortgage broker, I come across this situation on a regular basis.

Some people do genuinely forget, but most people who I have interviewed have chosen to hide this information from the lender because 'my residential rate is cheaper than a BTL rate'.

Either way, this is a fundamental breach of the residential mortgage Offer terms and conditions.

We can help, either with your current lender or if more appropriate with a new lender instead.

Luke P

15:43 PM, 18th October 2022, About 2 years ago

Also, I believe they will only allow the consent-to-let for 12-24 months, at which point they'll likely force you to move to a BTL product.

Dylan Morris

9:33 AM, 19th October 2022, About 2 years ago

“which does allow us to let our property during our fixed term with no rate increase” this is extremely unusual for a residential mortgage. It would be interesting to see the exact wording of this clause within the mortgage offer ?

Laura Coleman

10:50 AM, 19th October 2022, About 2 years ago

I have a Barclays mortgage and have been looking into getting a consent to let as my partner has a 12-18 month contract in another city. Speaking with them they are surprisingly flexible with this and the rate does stay the same however you have to have the intention to return to the property. Also the time limit is dependent I believe on the lengths of your deal. Mine is 5 years so I could have 2 years consent to let within that. For shorter periods like 3 year deal I think you would only be allowed 1 year for example. I haven't completed the form yet but the Barclays person gave me the impression that there aren't a lot of hoops to jump though.

Sjp

11:01 AM, 19th October 2022, About 2 years ago

She also asked how much trouble will she get into if she tells them?

Simon M

11:38 AM, 19th October 2022, About 2 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Howard Reuben CeMap CeRER at 18/10/2022 - 14:23
It's quite common - and fraud officers have the same view as Howard. All lenders share financial data to prevent fraud - much more than just electoral roll. E.g. if Barclays look they may find your landlord insurance.
It's better to own up as soon as possible. It's more likely Barclays will just rectify it - it may cost you nothing or at worst demand you pay the extra interest that would have been due.
If you don't and Barclays investigate they could be far more difficult. For example, the data sharing agreement requires all lenders to flag everyone they find committing fraud to other lenders.

Ann

11:54 AM, 19th October 2022, About 2 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Dylan Morris at 19/10/2022 - 09:33
We had a F/R mortgage with Santander, it had no interest rate increases when we applied for permission to let the property. We did not have to move to BTL product either. Permission was given for set periods 24 months IIRC, and then we applied again once that expired.

To the OP, I would be honest with your information on dates etc. You don't want to turn a genuine oversight into deliberate fraud.

Dylan Morris

12:25 PM, 19th October 2022, About 2 years ago

I’m really confused here. We’re told the mortgage allows for the property to be let out, but the borrower has requested consent to let forms ? Also the OP asks what trouble they will be in…..when the mortgage terms specifically allow for it.

Ann

13:33 PM, 19th October 2022, About 2 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Dylan Morris at 19/10/2022 - 12:25
If it's as ours was, consent to let is required and given without penalty. There is a fee for this computer generated letter, obviously!
Additionally, it was worded, consent will be freely given but with scary words if you didn't request the consent.

So, the terms allow for it, but you still need to request permission.

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