Life-Events

Buying Your First Home: Complete Financial Checklist

The full financial checklist for buying your first home in the UK — beyond just the deposit, covering all the costs, first-time buyer schemes, the conveyancing process, and what to do on completion day.

Buying your first home is the largest purchase most people ever make — and the process involves dozens of financial decisions, most of which aren’t well explained. This checklist covers everything from the moment you start saving to after completion day.


Stage 1: Before You Start Looking

1. Know What You Can Actually Afford

This is different from the maximum a lender will offer you.

Rough affordability calculation:

  • Most lenders offer ~4–4.5× your annual income (or combined income)
  • You need a minimum 5% deposit (10%+ unlocks better rates; 15%+ significantly better)
  • Monthly mortgage payments typically shouldn’t exceed 35–40% of take-home pay for comfortable budgeting

Example:

  • Combined income: £65,000
  • Maximum mortgage: ~£260,000–£292,500
  • Plus 10% deposit: £290,000–£325,000 purchase price
  • Monthly repayment at 4.5% on £265,000 over 25 years: ~£1,460/month

Use our mortgage calculators to run your own numbers.

2. Check Your Credit Score

Do this 6–12 months before you want to buy to allow time to fix issues:

  • Check on Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion (all free)
  • Ensure you’re on the electoral roll
  • Fix any errors or negative marks
  • Reduce credit card utilisation to below 30%
  • Don’t make any new credit applications in the 3 months before applying

3. Open or Maximise a Lifetime ISA

If you haven’t already — open a LISA now:

  • Must be opened before age 40
  • Contributes up to £4,000/year; government adds 25% (up to £1,000/year free)
  • Must be held for 12 months before use
  • Property must cost £450,000 or less

The earlier you open one, the sooner the 12-month clock starts. You don’t need to contribute fully straight away.

4. Understand the Full Cost of Buying

CostTypical rangeNotes
Deposit5–20% of purchase priceLarger deposit = better rates
Stamp Duty (SDLT)£0 on first £300k (FTB)Check current thresholds
Solicitor/conveyancer£1,000–£2,500Shop around for quotes
Survey — Homebuyers Report£400–£800Recommended minimum
Survey — Building (Full Structural)£600–£1,500Older homes / conversion
Mortgage arrangement fee£0–£2,000Can often be added to mortgage
Mortgage broker fee£0–£500Many fee-free brokers available
Removal costs£300–£2,000Varies by distance/volume
Buildings insurance (from exchange)£150–£350/yearRequired for completion
Initial furnishing/repairs£1,000–£10,000+Variable

Rule of thumb: Budget £5,000–£10,000 in buying costs beyond the deposit.


Stage 2: Getting Mortgage-Ready

5. Get a Mortgage Agreement in Principle

Before serious house viewing, get an AIP from your chosen lender or a mortgage broker. It:

  • Shows estate agents you’re a serious buyer
  • Gives you a realistic budget
  • Doesn’t affect your credit score significantly (soft search on most AIP applications)

An AIP lasts 60–90 days typically. It’s not a binding offer.

6. Use a Mortgage Broker (Seriously)

A whole-of-market mortgage broker can:

  • Access lenders not available directly to consumers
  • Know which lenders will accept your profile (credit history, income type, deposit size)
  • Handle paperwork and chase the lender
  • May be fee-free (paid by lender commission) — ask upfront

You are not obligated to use your bank’s products. A broker often finds better rates.

7. First-Time Buyer Schemes (2026)

SchemeWhat it offersWho qualifies
Lifetime ISA (LISA)25% bonus on savingsFirst-time buyers, under 40, home ≤ £450k
Shared OwnershipBuy 10–75% share, pay rent on restIncome limits apply, varies by area
First Homes30–50% discount on new buildsFTBs, key workers — local authority criteria
95% Mortgage Guarantee SchemeGov guarantee enables 5% deposit mortgagesMost mainstream lenders — check current availability

Stage 3: Making an Offer → Exchange

8. Instruct a Solicitor or Licensed Conveyancer

Do this as soon as an offer is accepted — not before, but immediately after. Delays in instructing cost time and deals.

They will:

  • Conduct searches (local authority, drainage, environmental)
  • Review the seller’s paperwork
  • Handle the transfer of funds
  • Register your ownership at Land Registry

Fees: £1,000–£2,500 including disbursements (searches, registration fees, etc.)

9. Commission a Survey

Survey typeCostWhat it tells you
Condition Report (Level 1)£250–£400Basic condition — limited detail
Homebuyers Report (Level 2)£400–£800Condition, visible defects, advice
Building Survey (Level 3)£600–£1,500Full structural + detailed report

For properties over 80 years old, conversions, or with obvious issues, get at minimum a Level 2 Homebuyers Report. For anything with roof access concerns, subsidence history, or structural age, get a Level 3 Building Survey.

The survey can provide grounds to renegotiate your offer if problems are found.

10. Formal Mortgage Offer

After your AIP and once you have a specific property, submit your full mortgage application. The lender will:

  • Conduct affordability checks
  • Request documents (payslips, bank statements, ID)
  • Commission their own valuation (this is for the lender, not a survey for you)

Stage 4: Exchange → Completion

11. Exchange of Contracts

At exchange:

  • You pay the exchange deposit (typically 10% of purchase price — distinct from your mortgage deposit)
  • The completion date is legally agreed
  • You are legally committed; walking away loses your deposit

Take out buildings insurance from exchange date — you are insuring it.

12. Completion Day

On completion:

  • Your solicitor transfers funds (your deposit + mortgage funds) to the seller’s solicitor
  • Keys are released (typically early afternoon)
  • Property is yours

Bring: Evidence of buildings insurance, identification, any keys arranged by the estate agent.


After Completion

13. Land Registry Registration

Your solicitor registers the property in your name with HM Land Registry. This typically takes 2–8 weeks (or longer — HMLR has significant backlogs). Until registered, you still own the property.

14. File Stamp Duty Return

Your solicitor files this on your behalf within 14 days of completion. Any SDLT due is paid at this stage.

15. Change Your Address — Everywhere

OrganisationAction needed
Driving licenceUpdate at DVLA (free online)
HMRC / Tax recordsUpdate Personal Tax Account
Electoral RollRegister at new address
Bank accountsUpdate all banks and building societies
Pension providersUpdate all policies
GP / NHSRegister with new local practice
UtilitiesSet up accounts (energy, water, broadband)
Council TaxRegister with local authority
Insurance policiesUpdate home, car, contents

First Home Financial Checklist

TaskStageDone?
Know your realistic budget (not just max mortgage)Pre-search
Check credit score and fix issues6–12 months before
Open/maximise Lifetime ISAAs early as possible
Build deposit + buying costs fundPre-search
Get mortgage AIPBefore active searching
Use a whole-of-market mortgage brokerBefore offer
Research first-time buyer schemesPre-offer
Instruct solicitor/conveyancerOn offer accepted
Commission surveyEarly in conveyancing
Submit formal mortgage applicationAfter offer accepted
Arrange buildings insurance from exchangeAt exchange
Complete address change with all organisationsAfter completion

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Stamp Duty Land Tax
  2. GOV.UK — Lifetime ISA
  3. GOV.UK — Help to Buy: Equity Loan