My SO Home: No. 23

“In many ways I’m happy with my decision to go down the shared ownership route. I don’t have to keep moving or be at the mercy of a private landlord; I’ve got more security now. But there have been some downsides too.”


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Before I bought my shared ownership flat I’d been subletting a council flat. It had just been refurbished, but the owner wanted it back once the work was finished. I couldn’t afford to rent privately and I didn’t want to commute for work, so I applied for the shared ownership scheme. In 2018 I got approval for a 100% mortgage with no stamp duty to pay as a first-time buyer. In fact, I secured a 35% share in a one-bedroom new-build flat in central London with a £100 cheque!

I was thrilled to be moving into a new home that no-one else had lived in before. A home which didn’t need any work done to it… However, I didn’t know how I was going to pay for everything I needed. I considered taking on a weekend job to supplement my income. Fortunately, after three years, I changed jobs and had a bigger salary. But up until then I was using credit cards and credit union loans to pay for furniture and so on.

In many ways I’m happy with my decision to go down the shared ownership route. I don’t have to keep moving or be at the mercy of a private landlord; I’ve got more security now.

The value of my property has increased so I have equity that I wouldn’t have had if I’d carried on renting. But there have been some downsides too.

I wish I hadn’t staircased to 80%. Now I realise that I shouldn’t have staircased unless I could afford to staircase all the way to 100%.

Image of upward arrow and stairs to illustrate staircasing to 80%
Image: macrovector, Freepik

It’s virtually impossible to sell an 80% share to a new shared owner, and my experience is that private buyers don’t want to buy in a development with social housing tenants.

I’ve experienced some anti-social behaviour from neighbours. Landlords have to take so many households from the council waiting list and, in my experience, these have been vulnerable people with complex needs. So I don’t think mixed developments work. Blocks should be either social rent tenancies or shared ownership.

Sales prices are over-inflated

Shared ownership sales prices are questionable. 25% at £125,000 seems affordable. But, when you look more closely, £500,000 as the full value is very expensive. Housing associations can inflate sales prices because people are only buying smaller percentages initially. Are the ‘not-for-profits’ really not-for-profit?!

As a shared owner, you need the value to go up so you have equity but then that makes buying the remaining shares unaffordable.

What advice would I give to someone considering a shared ownership home? It depends on your circumstances, of course, but I’d suggest thinking of shared ownership as buying a secured tenancy and not as owning your own home. Don’t staircase unless you want to stay there long-term or you can afford to buy all the remaining shares. Don’t even think about staircasing to 80%!

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Featured image: iStock

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