Mortgages & Property

Help to Buy Alternatives UK 2025: Schemes to Help You Buy a Home

With Help to Buy closed, discover the alternative schemes available to help you buy a home in 2025. Compare First Homes, Shared Ownership, Lifetime ISA and other options for first-time buyers.

Mortgage information is general guidance only. Mortgages are regulated by the FCA. YOUR HOME MAY BE REPOSSESSED IF YOU DO NOT KEEP UP REPAYMENTS ON YOUR MORTGAGE. Consult an FCA-regulated mortgage adviser before making decisions.

Help to Buy’s equity loan scheme closed in 2022, but several alternatives can still help you get on the property ladder. This guide compares all the current options available in 2025 to help you find the right path to homeownership.

Help to Buy Alternatives at a Glance

Scheme How It Helps Best For
First Homes 30-50% discount on new builds First-time buyers, key workers
Shared Ownership Buy a share, rent the rest Lower incomes, smaller deposits
Lifetime ISA 25% bonus on savings Savers planning ahead
95% LTV Mortgages Buy with 5% deposit Those with small deposits
Help to Build Equity loan for self-build Custom build projects
Right to Buy Discount for council tenants Social housing tenants
Local Authority Schemes Varies by area Check your council

First Homes Scheme

How First Homes Works

Feature Detail
Discount 30-50% off market value
Who qualifies First-time buyers
Price cap (after discount) £250,000 (£420,000 London)
Income cap £80,000 (£90,000 London)
Mortgage Required for discounted price
Deposit 5-10% of discounted price
Properties New builds only

First Homes Examples

Market Value Discount You Pay 10% Deposit Mortgage Needed
£200,000 30% £140,000 £14,000 £126,000
£250,000 30% £175,000 £17,500 £157,500
£300,000 30% £210,000 £21,000 £189,000
£350,000 30% £245,000 £24,500 £220,500
£300,000 40% £180,000 £18,000 £162,000
£350,000 50% £175,000 £17,500 £157,500

First Homes Eligibility

Requirement Detail
First-time buyer Never owned before
Household income Under £80k (£90k London)
Mortgage requirement Must get mortgage for at least 50% of discounted price
Main residence Must live there yourself
Local connection Some schemes prioritize local buyers
Key worker priority Some schemes prioritize essential workers

First Homes Considerations

Pros Cons
Large discount (30-50%) Limited availability
Own 100% of property Must sell to eligible buyer at same discount
Deposit on lower price New builds only
No rent to pay Cap on future sale price
Build equity fully Location dependent

How to Apply for First Homes

  1. Search “First Homes” on developer websites
  2. Register with local housing authority
  3. Check eligibility criteria for specific developments
  4. Submit application with income evidence
  5. Get mortgage agreement in principle
  6. Complete purchase through normal process

Shared Ownership

How Shared Ownership Works

Feature Detail
Purchase share 25-75% (some allow 10%)
Rent On unowned share (usually 2.75%/year)
Staircasing Buy more shares over time
Income cap £80,000 (£90,000 London)
Properties New builds and resales
Deposit Typically 5-10% of your share

Shared Ownership Example

£250,000 property, buying 25% share:

Component Amount
Property value £250,000
Your share (25%) £62,500
Deposit (10% of share) £6,250
Mortgage needed £56,250
Monthly mortgage (~5%) ~£330
Monthly rent (2.75% of £187,500) ~£430
Total monthly ~£760

Shared Ownership vs Full Purchase

Factor Shared Ownership (25%) Full Purchase
Deposit needed £6,250 £25,000 (10%)
Mortgage needed £56,250 £225,000
Monthly mortgage ~£330 ~£1,320
Monthly rent ~£430 £0
Total monthly ~£760 ~£1,320
Equity ownership 25% 100%

Shared Ownership Costs to Consider

Cost Typical Amount Notes
Deposit 5-10% of your share Much lower than full purchase
Mortgage On your share only Lower monthly payments
Rent 2.75% of housing association’s share Must budget for both
Service charge £50-£200/month For flats especially
Ground rent £0-£100/year Leasehold properties
Buildings insurance Often included in service charge Check what’s covered
Staircasing fees £500-£1,500 Each time you buy more

Staircasing: Buying More Shares

Current Share Buy Additional New Share New Rent Base
25% 10% 35% 65% of value
35% 15% 50% 50% of value
50% 25% 75% 25% of value
75% 25% 100% No rent

Note: Each purchase is at current market value, not original price.

Shared Ownership Considerations

Pros Cons
Lower deposit needed Pay rent AND mortgage
Smaller mortgage Selling can be complex
Build equity Repairs remain your responsibility
Staircase to full ownership Service charges can be high
Wider property access May be harder to remortgage
Available on new and existing Some leasehold restrictions

Lifetime ISA

How Lifetime ISA Works

Feature Detail
Annual savings limit £4,000
Government bonus 25% (up to £1,000/year)
Property price limit £450,000
Age to open 18-39
Age to use Until 60
Withdrawal penalty 25% if not for first home or retirement

Lifetime ISA Savings Growth

Years Saving You Save Bonus (25%) Interest (~4%) Total
1 £4,000 £1,000 £100 £5,100
2 £8,000 £2,000 £400 £10,400
3 £12,000 £3,000 £900 £15,900
4 £16,000 £4,000 £1,600 £21,600
5 £20,000 £5,000 £2,500 £27,500

LISA vs Regular Savings (5 years)

Factor Lifetime ISA Regular ISA
Your contributions £20,000 £20,000
Government bonus £5,000 £0
Interest (estimated) ~£2,500 ~£2,500
Total £27,500 £22,500

Difference: £5,000 extra with LISA

Lifetime ISA Rules

Rule Detail
First-time buyer Never owned property before
Property limit £450,000 maximum purchase price
Hold period Must be open 12 months before use
Penalty withdrawal 25% withdrawn (lose bonus + 6.25%)
Completion rule Must complete within 90 days of payment

LISA Providers

Provider Type Examples Features
Cash LISA Various banks/building societies Easy access, lower risk
Stocks & Shares LISA AJ Bell, Hargreaves Lansdown Higher potential returns, more risk

For short-term (1-3 years): Cash LISA is safer For longer-term (5+ years): Stocks & Shares may offer better returns

95% LTV Mortgages

How 5% Deposit Mortgages Work

Feature Detail
Deposit required 5% of property price
LTV 95%
Interest rates Higher than larger deposit mortgages
Availability Most major lenders
Property types Most standard properties

95% LTV Example Costs

Property Price 5% Deposit Mortgage Monthly (~5.5%)
£200,000 £10,000 £190,000 £1,168
£250,000 £12,500 £237,500 £1,460
£300,000 £15,000 £285,000 £1,752
£350,000 £17,500 £332,500 £2,044

25-year term, repayment mortgage. Rates illustrative.

95% LTV vs Larger Deposits

Deposit LTV Typical Rate Monthly (£250k property)
5% (£12,500) 95% 5.5% £1,460
10% (£25,000) 90% 4.9% £1,387
15% (£37,500) 85% 4.5% £1,331
20% (£50,000) 80% 4.2% £1,295

Lower deposit = higher rate = higher monthly payments

Help to Build: Equity Loan

For self-build and custom-build homes.

How Help to Build Works

Feature Detail
Equity loan 5-20% (40% in London)
Your deposit 5% minimum
Property value limit £600,000
Interest Free for 5 years, then 1.75% rising
Repayment When you sell, remortgage, or voluntarily
Eligibility First-time buyers and existing owners

Help to Build Example

Building a £400,000 home:

Component Amount Percentage
Your deposit £20,000 5%
Help to Build loan £80,000 20%
Mortgage £300,000 75%
Total £400,000 100%

Help to Build Process

  1. Find a plot or custom build opportunity
  2. Get Decision in Principle from lender
  3. Apply for Help to Build equity loan
  4. Build your home (staged payments)
  5. Complete and move in
  6. Repay equity loan eventually

Right to Buy

Who Can Use Right to Buy

Requirement Detail
Council or housing association tenant 3+ years tenancy
Main home Must be your only or main residence
Secure tenancy Certain tenancy types only
Property type Most houses and flats

Right to Buy Discounts (England)

Property Type Maximum Discount
House £102,400
Flat £136,400
London (house) £136,400
London (flat) £182,200

Right to Buy Discount Calculation

Years as Tenant House Discount Flat Discount
3 years 35% 50%
4 years 36% 52%
5 years 37% 54%
Each extra year +1% +2%
Maximum 70% 70%

Subject to maximum cash discounts above.

Other Help Buying Schemes

Deposit Unlock

Some developers offer schemes where deposit is covered or reduced.

Feature Detail
Deposit 5% (developer supported)
Property New builds from participating developers
Mortgage Through participating lenders
Cost May be built into property price

Family Springboard Mortgages

Family member’s savings help secure better rate.

Feature Detail
Family contribution Typically 10% in savings account
Your deposit 0-5% (varies by lender)
Savings locked Usually 5 years
Interest Family earns interest on their savings
Risk Family savings at risk if you default

Guarantor Mortgages

Family member guarantees your mortgage.

Feature Detail
Guarantor role Covers payments if you can’t
Deposit Can be lower than standard
Guarantor requirement Usually homeowner with good income
Risk Guarantor is liable for mortgage
Duration Until equity reaches threshold

Comparing All Options

Scheme Deposit Needed Income Limit Property Cap Pros Cons
First Homes 5-10% of discounted price £80k/£90k £250k/£420k Large discount Limited availability
Shared Ownership 5-10% of share £80k/£90k None Very low deposit Pay rent too
Lifetime ISA 5%+ (with bonus) None £450,000 25% bonus 12-month wait
95% mortgage 5% None Varies Widely available Higher rates
Help to Build 5% None £600,000 Self-build flexibility Complex process
Right to Buy None Must be tenant N/A Huge discounts Tenant only

Which Option Is Right for You?

Choose First Homes If:

  • You’re a first-time buyer
  • Household income under £80k/£90k
  • Want to own 100% of property
  • Happy with new build
  • Can find First Homes property in your area

Choose Shared Ownership If:

  • Very limited deposit
  • Income under £80k/£90k
  • Want to get on ladder now
  • Can afford rent + mortgage
  • Happy to buy more shares later

Choose Lifetime ISA If:

  • Planning to buy in 1+ years
  • Under 40 years old
  • Property target under £450,000
  • Can save regularly
  • Want free government money

Choose 95% Mortgage If:

  • Have 5% deposit ready
  • Want to buy now
  • Prefer full ownership
  • Can afford higher rates
  • Don’t want scheme restrictions

Summary

Help to Buy has ended, but homeownership is still achievable through:

  1. First Homes — 30-50% discount for eligible first-time buyers
  2. Shared Ownership — Buy part of a home with a smaller deposit
  3. Lifetime ISA — Get 25% boost on savings for your deposit
  4. 95% LTV mortgages — Available from many lenders without schemes
  5. Help to Build — Equity loan for self-build projects
  6. Right to Buy — Discounts for council/housing association tenants

Research all options and see which fits your deposit savings, income level, and homeownership goals. Many people combine approaches — for example, using a Lifetime ISA bonus while saving for a Shared Ownership deposit.

Sources

  1. Gov.uk - First Homes Scheme
  2. Gov.uk - Shared Ownership
  3. Gov.uk - Lifetime ISA
  4. Money Helper - Help Buying a Home