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Possible FTB ramble & should he take out a credit card?

MrsMopFace
Posts: 3 Newbie
My husband and I decided this weekend to go down the route of buying a house. Due to my previous debts and me now working on an ad hoc freelance basis we are opting to just apply in his name.
We aren't looking for a big place somewhere in the region of £80k and the in laws are offering to give us a £10k deposit and we intend to save £7-10k in the next year with about £5k going to the deposit and the rest for moving costs/legal etc.
Currently my husband has no debt apart from student loans and an overdraft which we're going to clear this month. In '06 we had a CCJ threat letter for unpaid council tax which we then paid immediately - would this cause problems?
He earns 35k on his own so could easily make the repayments on a this region of mortgage. However we've been wondering how his lack of debt will fair, he has never had to pay anything back apart from this overdraft. Should he take out a credit card and occasionally spend then pay back or just stay clear? Would his lack of credit history cause a problem in applying for a mortgage?
I know this is really a real ramble but I just like to have things ironed out in my head and my notebook so I know what to expect.
Thank you for reading.
We aren't looking for a big place somewhere in the region of £80k and the in laws are offering to give us a £10k deposit and we intend to save £7-10k in the next year with about £5k going to the deposit and the rest for moving costs/legal etc.
Currently my husband has no debt apart from student loans and an overdraft which we're going to clear this month. In '06 we had a CCJ threat letter for unpaid council tax which we then paid immediately - would this cause problems?
He earns 35k on his own so could easily make the repayments on a this region of mortgage. However we've been wondering how his lack of debt will fair, he has never had to pay anything back apart from this overdraft. Should he take out a credit card and occasionally spend then pay back or just stay clear? Would his lack of credit history cause a problem in applying for a mortgage?
I know this is really a real ramble but I just like to have things ironed out in my head and my notebook so I know what to expect.
Thank you for reading.
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Comments
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If it's six months in future, or more, a credit card, well conducted and repaid each month, will help and won't incur any interest costs.I am a mortgage broker. You should note that this site doesn't check my status as a Mortgage Adviser, so you need to take my word for it. This signature is here as I follow MSE's Mortgage Adviser Code of Conduct. Any posts on here are for information and discussion purposes only and shouldn't be seen as financial advice. Please do not send PMs asking for one-to-one-advice, or representation.0
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kingstreet wrote: »If it's six months in future, or more, a credit card, well conducted and repaid each month, will help and won't incur any interest costs.
Thank you Kingstreet that is good to know. I'll have him look at credit cards tonight. We actually need to buy a new bed so maybe he could use the credit card for that and then pay it back in full the second the bill comes in.0 -
best to look at his credit files to see what they show0
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Thank you Clapton, I'll get on to that ASAP. Is it true we need to check 3 different sources?0
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MrsMopFace wrote: »In '06 we had a CCJ threat letter for unpaid council tax which we then paid immediately - would this cause problems?
This may appear pedantic, but the corollary is that if there is no ccj, there is nothing to go on your credit record.You might as well ask the Wizard of Oz to give you a big number as pay a Credit Referencing Agency for a so-called 'credit-score'0
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