Missed payments, defaults, CCJs — find out what's possible and how to give yourself the best chance.
Yes — but your options depend heavily on the type, severity, and age of the adverse credit on your file. High street lenders are generally inflexible with credit issues, but there is a substantial market of specialist lenders who exist specifically to lend to borrowers with imperfect credit histories. With the right advice, many people who think they can't get a mortgage actually can.
Lenders categorise adverse credit on a spectrum. Generally:
💡 Time is your friend. The older the adverse credit, the less weight lenders give it. Most issues become significantly less impactful after 3 years, and after 6 years they drop off your credit file entirely.
The more severe your credit issues, the larger the deposit lenders will require — both to reduce their risk and to improve the rate available to you:
⚠️ Avoid applying directly to multiple lenders if you have bad credit. Each hard credit search leaves a mark on your file. A mortgage adviser can soft-search the market and identify the right lender before any application is made.
Yes — adverse credit mortgages carry higher rates than standard products, reflecting the increased perceived risk. However, rates vary considerably between specialist lenders, and the gap has narrowed in recent years. With the right advice, you may find the rate is more affordable than you expected.
Many borrowers with adverse credit successfully get on the ladder, rebuild their credit profile, and remortgage onto significantly better rates 2–3 years later.
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