Mortgages & Property

Should I Get a Joint Mortgage? — Pros, Cons and Alternatives

Is a joint mortgage the right choice? Understand the benefits, risks, legal implications, and alternatives like guarantor mortgages and joint borrower sole proprietor deals.

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.

A joint mortgage lets two or more people buy a property together. It boosts borrowing power, but comes with serious legal and financial responsibilities. Here’s how to decide.

How Joint Mortgages Work

Feature Detail
Maximum borrowers Usually 2 (some lenders allow up to 4)
Income assessment Combined incomes used for affordability
Typical borrowing 4-4.5× combined income
Liability Both borrowers equally liable for full amount
Credit check Both applicants checked
Deposit Can come from either or both parties

Who They’re For

Joint mortgages are common for:

  • Couples — married, civil partners, or cohabiting
  • Friends — buying together to get on the property ladder
  • Family members — parent and child buying together
  • Business partners — investment properties

Joint Tenants vs Tenants in Common

This is a critical choice that affects what happens to the property.

Feature Joint Tenants Tenants in Common
Ownership Equal shares Can be unequal (e.g., 60/40)
If one dies Other automatically inherits Share passes per will
Can sell share independently No Yes
Best for Married couples Unmarried co-buyers, unequal deposits

Most couples choose joint tenants. Unmarried buyers or those contributing different amounts should usually choose tenants in common with a deed of trust.

Advantages of a Joint Mortgage

1. Borrow More

Scenario Solo (£35,000 salary) Joint (£35,000 + £30,000)
Max borrowing (4.5×) £157,500 £292,500
With £30,000 deposit £187,500 budget £322,500 budget

2. Better Rates

Higher deposit relative to property value means a lower loan-to-value (LTV), which unlocks better interest rates.

3. Shared Costs

All housing costs — mortgage, bills, repairs, insurance — are shared between two people.

4. Easier to Save a Deposit

Two people saving is faster than one. A £30,000 deposit takes half the time with two savers.

Risks and Downsides

1. Joint and Several Liability

Both borrowers are equally liable for the entire mortgage — not just their half. If one person stops paying, the other must cover the full amount or risk repossession.

2. Credit File Linked

Your credit files become associated. Your partner’s debt problems can affect your ability to get credit.

3. Relationship Breakdown

Splitting up with a joint mortgage is complicated and expensive. You can’t simply walk away — the mortgage must be dealt with.

4. Stamp Duty Complications

If either buyer already owns property, you’ll both pay the higher rate of stamp duty (additional 5% surcharge from 2025).

5. Loss of First-Time Buyer Status

If one person has owned before, neither gets first-time buyer relief on stamp duty.

Alternatives to a Joint Mortgage

Option How it works Best for
Guarantor mortgage Parent guarantees payments but isn’t on the deed Young buyers with parental support
Joint Borrower Sole Proprietor Both incomes used but only one person owns Avoiding stamp duty surcharge
Family offset mortgage Family savings offset mortgage interest Family support without gifting cash
Gifted deposit Family gives deposit funds First-time buyers needing a leg up
Shared Ownership Buy 25-75% of a property Affordable housing scheme

Before Getting a Joint Mortgage — Checklist

  1. Get a deed of trust — especially if unmarried or contributing different amounts
  2. Check both credit scores — a poor score from either party affects the application
  3. Discuss exit plans — what happens if you split up?
  4. Agree on overpayments — will both contribute equally?
  5. Choose ownership type — joint tenants or tenants in common
  6. Consider life insurance — what happens if one person dies?
  7. Get independent legal advice — especially for friends or family buying together

When a Joint Mortgage Isn’t Worth It

  • One person has very poor credit — it could be better to wait or use a guarantor
  • One person already owns property — stamp duty surcharge applies to both
  • The relationship is new or unstable — untangling is expensive
  • You could afford to buy alone — keeping financial independence has value

Sources

  1. MoneyHelper — Guarantor mortgages