Property

Equity Release Guide UK — Should You Unlock Cash From Your Home?

Understand equity release — how lifetime mortgages and home reversion plans work, the risks, costs, alternatives, and whether it's right for your situation.

Equity release allows homeowners to access the wealth locked in their property without moving. For asset-rich, cash-poor retirees, it can provide much-needed income — but it comes with significant costs and long-term implications. Understanding the options thoroughly is essential before making this decision.

How Equity Release Works

Lifetime Mortgage (Most Common — 95%+ of plans)

  1. You borrow a lump sum or regular amounts against your property
  2. Interest is charged (fixed or variable rate) and typically rolls up (compounds)
  3. You continue to live in your home
  4. The loan plus accumulated interest is repaid when you die or move into permanent care
  5. Your home is sold to repay the debt; any remaining equity goes to your estate

Home Reversion Plan (Less Common)

  1. You sell part or all of your property to a provider at below market value (typically 20–60%)
  2. You receive a lump sum or regular payments
  3. You live rent-free in the property for life
  4. On death or moving into care, the provider takes their share (or all) of the sale proceeds

How Much Can You Release?

Your Age Approximate Maximum Release (% of Property Value)
55 20–25%
60 25–30%
65 30–40%
70 35–45%
75 40–55%
80+ 45–60%

Example: Property worth £300,000, homeowner aged 70

  • Maximum release: approximately 35–45% = £105,000–£135,000

Health conditions may increase the amount available (enhanced plans).

The Compound Interest Problem

The biggest concern with equity release is rolled-up interest. Because most people do not make monthly repayments, the interest compounds and the debt grows rapidly:

Amount Released Interest Rate Debt After 10 Years Debt After 20 Years
£50,000 5.0% £81,445 £132,665
£50,000 6.0% £89,542 £160,357
£50,000 7.0% £98,358 £193,484
£100,000 5.0% £162,889 £265,330
£100,000 6.0% £179,085 £320,714

At 6% interest, a £100,000 loan becomes £320,714 after 20 years — consuming much or all of the property’s value.

Equity Release Council Protections

Reputable providers are members of the Equity Release Council, which guarantees:

Protection What It Means
No negative equity guarantee You never owe more than your home is worth
Right to remain You can live in your home for life
Fixed or capped rates Available to prevent spiralling costs
Portability Move to a suitable alternative property
Independent advice You must receive advice from a qualified adviser

When Equity Release May Be Appropriate

  • You need to supplement retirement income and have no other options
  • You want to gift money to family now (for house deposits, etc.)
  • You need to fund home adaptations or care
  • You want to pay off an existing mortgage to reduce outgoings
  • Your estate planning is not a priority

When to Consider Alternatives First

Alternative Benefit
Downsizing Release equity outright, no ongoing debt
Remortgaging Lower rates than equity release
Retirement interest-only mortgage Pay interest only, preserve equity
Benefits check Pension Credit and other benefits may be available
Letting a room Up to £7,500/year tax-free
Council tax reduction May reduce outgoings
Budgeting Review spending with our budget planner guide

The Impact on Your Estate

Scenario Property Value Equity Released Debt at Death (15 yrs, 5.5%) Remaining for Estate
No equity release £350,000 £0 £0 £350,000
£75,000 released £350,000 £75,000 £168,000 £182,000
£150,000 released £350,000 £150,000 £336,000 £14,000

Equity release significantly reduces what you leave to beneficiaries. Discuss with your family before proceeding.

Costs and Fees

Cost Typical Amount
Arrangement fee £500–£1,000
Valuation fee £150–£400
Solicitor fees £500–£1,000
Financial advice £500–£1,500
Total setup costs £1,650–£3,900

Plus ongoing interest (typically 5–7% per year, compounding).

The Process

  1. Take independent financial advice (mandatory)
  2. Adviser assesses your situation and recommends options
  3. Choose a provider and plan
  4. Property valuation
  5. Legal process (conveyancing)
  6. Funds released (typically 4–8 weeks from application)
  7. Ongoing — option to make voluntary interest payments with many modern plans

Making Interest Payments

Many modern lifetime mortgages allow voluntary interest payments:

  • Pay interest monthly to prevent the debt growing
  • Make partial capital repayments (typically up to 10% per year)
  • This dramatically reduces the total cost and preserves more equity

If you can afford to make payments, this makes equity release much more manageable — but raises the question of whether you really need to release equity.

For broader retirement planning, see our retirement income guide and state pension guide.