💳 Secured Loans

Homeowner Loans UK: Borrow Against Property

Everything you need to know about homeowner loans uk in the UK.

📖 5 min read ✅ FCA-regulated advisers 🆓 Free to use

What is a homeowner loan?

A homeowner loan, also known as a secured loan or second charge mortgage, is a loan secured against your property. Unlike an unsecured personal loan, the lender has a legal claim on your home if you fail to repay. This security allows lenders to offer larger amounts and longer repayment terms than unsecured borrowing.

Homeowner loans are typically used when you need to borrow £10,000 to £100,000 or more and either cannot or do not want to remortgage. They sit as a second charge behind your main mortgage, meaning your mortgage lender gets paid first if the property is sold.

These loans are regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) under the same regime as mortgages, giving you the same consumer protections including the right to complain to the Financial Ombudsman Service.

How homeowner loans work

The lender places a second charge on your property. Your existing mortgage remains as the first charge. You make separate monthly repayments on the homeowner loan in addition to your mortgage payments.

The amount you can borrow depends on equity in your home. Lenders typically allow a combined loan-to-value (LTV) of up to 85–90% across your mortgage and the homeowner loan. If your home is worth £300,000 with a £200,000 mortgage, a lender at 85% LTV might lend up to £55,000.

Repayment terms range from 3 to 30 years, with fixed or variable interest. Monthly repayments are capital-and-interest, gradually reducing the loan balance.

Rates and costs

Interest rates on homeowner loans are higher than first charge mortgages but significantly lower than unsecured loans or credit cards. Typical rates range from 4% to 15% APR. Additional costs include:

Always compare the total cost of borrowing over the full term rather than just the headline rate.

Homeowner loans versus remortgaging

💡 If locked into a mortgage with early repayment charges of 3–5%, a homeowner loan is often better even at a higher interest rate, because you avoid paying thousands in ERCs. Run the numbers on both options before deciding.

Risks of homeowner loans

The most significant risk is that your home is at risk if you fail to keep up repayments. Other risks include:

⚠️ Be very cautious about using a homeowner loan for debt consolidation. While it lowers monthly payments, you are replacing unsecured debt (which cannot lead to losing your home) with secured debt (which can). Only consolidate if you are confident you will not accumulate new debts.

Who are homeowner loans suitable for?

Homeowner loans are most appropriate when you need to borrow a large sum exceeding unsecured limits (typically £25,000), have a competitive mortgage deal you do not want to lose, when remortgaging is impractical due to ERCs, or when your credit history makes remortgaging at a good rate difficult.

They are generally not suitable for short-term borrowing, small amounts that a personal loan could handle, or situations where you have limited equity.

Get expert help with secured borrowing

A homeowner loan is a significant commitment using your home as security. Getting professional advice ensures the right product, appropriate borrowing, and full understanding of costs. Nesto can match you with experienced mortgage brokers who can compare homeowner loans alongside remortgaging for the most cost-effective solution.

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→ Secured Loans UK → Secured Loans for Home Improvements UK → Secured Loans with Bad Credit UK → Secured Loan Interest Rates UK 2026 → Secured Loan vs Remortgage UK
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