I have spoken to a free one, but unfortunately they don't have the product that will enable me to get the mortgage.I'd always use a mortgage advisor personally. I used a free one and they took all the stress out of it for me. I'm not sure about your situation. How much is their charge? Are you going to be borrowing from a high street or a sub prime lender?
£500 is a lot. Any who actually charge that I've encountered were under 200.I have spoken to a free one, but unfortunately they don't have the product that will enable me to get the mortgage.
It's a high street bank. The mortgage advisor is £500, which I think is pretty standard? Then the cost of the product in £1,000. Just would be nice to save that £500, but if mortgage advisors give better rates than going direct it's obviously more worth it. So wanted to see what people thought/their experience.
Try y-not finance. I can recommend Paul. He's absolutely fantasticI have spoken to a free one, but unfortunately they don't have the product that will enable me to get the mortgage.
It's a high street bank. The mortgage advisor is £500, which I think is pretty standard? Then the cost of the product in £1,000. Just would be nice to save that £500, but if mortgage advisors give better rates than going direct it's obviously more worth it. So wanted to see what people thought/their experience.
I used an independent mortgage advisor for my first house purchase and he got commission from the lender and I paid £225 out of pocket. It was worth all that (and more imo!) because if took all the stress out of the process. I’ll be going back there when my remortgage is due.Oh wow, ok - I thought that was the standard. I'll have a look and see if I can find anyone cheaper.
Thanks everyone![]()
It shouldn't do, as you'd still undergo the same hard credit searches upon application through an advisor vs direct. Just remember - the rate you're initially shown on discussion with an advisor/direct with the bank may not be what you're actually offered after your full application has been done. For example, I applied direct with Lloyds for a 95% mortgage, which is what the in-house advisor recommended me, but when my full application went through they would only offer me 85% LTV. I went with an advisor after that and applied elsewhere and managed to get a 95% LTV through Skipton.Thanks everyone
Does the rate differ from the advisor vs if you were to go direct to the high-street lender?
Oh yeah, that’s a very good point. Thanks for the advice everyone!It shouldn't do, as you'd still undergo the same hard credit searches upon application through an advisor vs direct. Just remember - the rate you're initially shown on discussion with an advisor/direct with the bank may not be what you're actually offered after your full application has been done. For example, I applied direct with Lloyds for a 95% mortgage, which is what the in-house advisor recommended me, but when my full application went through they would only offer me 85% LTV. I went with an advisor after that and applied elsewhere and managed to get a 95% LTV through Skipton.
My mortgage adviser is 499.I have spoken to a free one, but unfortunately they don't have the product that will enable me to get the mortgage.
It's a high street bank. The mortgage advisor is £500, which I think is pretty standard? Then the cost of the product in £1,000. Just would be nice to save that £500, but if mortgage advisors give better rates than going direct it's obviously more worth it. So wanted to see what people thought/their experience.
I can second this. No wait times for customer service. Mortgage side of thing was very smooth and fast. You can fill in most details online. Gave us the best rate and we didn't even use a mortgage adviser given my bf used to work as one.Try first direct. Fantastic customer service and they win lots of awards. Free mortgage advisers who are fully qualified. Plus unlimited overpayments. Free standard valuation. Open 7 days a week. Really great to.deal with. Usually lend.4.75 x salary
Your lender should contact you well in advance, but yes 6 months out to start having a look at deals. Check if you are able to move to a new fixed term online with your present lender, and if that deal is competitive.When is the best time to look for a new mortgage after my current one runs out I've read 3-6 months? Is it also worth getting a mortgage advisor for a renewal? My current deal runs out March 2027 so I'm thinking end of 2026 I'll have to start to look?
Great thanks it's the first time I'll have to do it. I'll be sad to lose my 2.17%Your lender should contact you well in advance, but yes 6 months out to start having a look at deals. Check if you are able to move to a new fixed term online with your present lender, and if that deal is competitive.
Look at mortgage best buys online (Martin Lewis' MSE website is helpful for this) and remember to factor in if there is a product arrangement fee, what might look like a cheaper deal in terms of interest rate might have an overall higher cost once you've factored in a £1495 arrangement fee.
Last time I renewed (and changed providers), I looked at MSE best buys table and top was a High Street bank I had a savings account with, so it was pretty straightforward, didn't need a mortgage advisor - leave at least 12 weeks to get it arranged, though.
I’m only on 1.19% at the moment so dreading having to remortgage! I’ve got another year before I need to think about looking so also hoping rates go down a bitGreat thanks it's the first time I'll have to do it. I'll be sad to lose my 2.17%at least it's going down and I'm hoping it'll go down further by the time I'm looking
![]()