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First-time Buyer

More than half of parents expect to help children onto property ladder

Your Money
Written By:
Your Money
Posted:
Updated:
23/06/2014

More than half of parents are worried their children won’t be able to get onto the property ladder without financial support, according to new research by TSB.

Unsurprisingly, Londoners express most concern (60%), though even the least concerned Scots (43%) worry about the next generation’s ability to get onto the property ladder.

Close to four in five (78%) say cost of buying today is too high.

While more than two thirds (69%) of first-time buyers from older generations got onto the property ladder without financial support – other than mortgages – almost half of parents (49%) today feel they will need to help their children financially as they may otherwise never be able to afford a home of their own.

Stamp duty also isn’t helping as it’s a cost that creeps up with the rise of house prices.

More than two in five (44%) of those from previous generations did not pay stamp duty when they bought their first home, yet just over one in 10 (14%) of their children have been as lucky.

In fact, parents whose children are yet to buy their first home are even less optimistic: few (6%) expect their children to pay no stamp duty, and nearly one in six (16%) believe their offspring will never be able to buy their first home without parental financial support.

Ian Ramsden, TSB’s director of mortgages, said: “It’s a cause for great concern that so many parents envisage their children’s home-owning hopes slipping away.

“As a result, parents are feeling the need to reach deep into their own pockets to help their offspring. However, not every parent can afford to give a helping hand, which is why incentives such as our current stamp duty offer can make a real difference, helping first-time buyers’ dreams of their own four walls come true.”


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