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Mortgage offer 45% less than bank's calculator?

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YorkshireJames
YorkshireJames Posts: 70 Forumite
Part of the Furniture 10 Posts Name Dropper Combo Breaker
edited 11 November 2021 at 8:05PM in Mortgages & endowments
I'd really appreciate some help.

When we put in our details onto the mortgage comparison sites and bank websites we're getting £155-160k consistently. But when we applied for Lloyds today they said instead of the £160k on the calculator they could only lend us £90k. We've got a 40% deposit and perfect credit score, so we're not risky.

We've just had an offer accepted and now we're way short. What am I missing? We just put the same numbers into Lloyds calculator again and it shows as £160k. What am I doing wrong?
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Comments

  • The online calculators do not
    - take into a account a thorough consideration of your outgoings to establish affordability
    - consider whether they will include certain sources of income
    -check your credit score

    A similar thing happened to my brother and sister in law. They had failed to account in the online calculators the fact my brother was getting a significant portion of his earnings from overtime and my SIL was taking her child benefit into account when calculating income.

    Suggest you speak to a broker and then try a different lender
  • MaryNB
    MaryNB Posts: 2,319 Forumite
    1,000 Posts Third Anniversary Name Dropper
    I'd really appreciate some help.

    When we put in our details onto the mortgage comparison sites and bank websites we're getting £155-160k consistently. But when we applied for Lloyds today they said instead of the £160k on the calculator they could only lend us £90k. We've got a 40% deposit and perfect credit score, so we're not risky.

    We've just had an offer accepted and now we're way short. What am I missing? We just put the same numbers into Lloyds calculator again and it shows as £160k. What am I doing wrong?
    Lenders don't see your credit score. They look at your credit reports and do their own scoring which will be different to the score you see. Have you had a look at your three credit reports - Experian, Equifax and TransUnion? Make sure there's no anything unexpected on them.
  • ACG
    ACG Posts: 24,607 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper I've helped Parliament
    Call up Lloyds and ask them. 
    I am a Mortgage Adviser
    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.
  • We had the same problem with Nationwide and Barclays. We are hoping to include child tax credits and/or child benefits which nationwide and lloyds and barclays have all said they can include. No major outgoings a small student loan. No debt. Good credit scores when we checked a month ago. The online calculator knew it was tax credits. #baffled.
  • MaryNB
    MaryNB Posts: 2,319 Forumite
    1,000 Posts Third Anniversary Name Dropper
    We had the same problem with Nationwide and Barclays. We are hoping to include child tax credits and/or child benefits which nationwide and lloyds and barclays have all said they can include. No major outgoings a small student loan. No debt. Good credit scores when we checked a month ago. The online calculator knew it was tax credits. #baffled.
    Score is irrelevant. Lenders don't see it. It isn't used for loan applications. They look at the data on your report(s) and do their own internal scoring which you aren't privvy to. Check the information is correct on all three reports (Experian/Equifax/TransUnion). The data is important, not the score.  
  • aoleks
    aoleks Posts: 720 Forumite
    500 Posts First Anniversary Name Dropper
    edited 11 November 2021 at 10:55PM
    what calculator did you use? if it's the simple one you can find on any consumer website, they're as useful as a turd. try one of these, everything else is a waste of time:


    also, get a broker. do NOT, under any circumstances, limit yourself to "your" bank, a lender a friend has used, someone who impressed you with their advertising etc. that's not how the real life works!
  • Have you calculated income in a different way to the lender? 
  • london21
    london21 Posts: 2,159 Forumite
    1,000 Posts Fourth Anniversary Name Dropper
    Quickest response will be to contact the lenders.

    What is your income 
    what is your outgoings, do you have dependants etc
  • Thanks everyone, our mortgage broker confirmed it's not us, we've been entering the details correctly. Its across the whole market apparently and lots of mortgage affordabilities are being cut by huge percentages. Apparently 95% of mortgages our broker had looked at for us got reduced this week.
  • aoleks
    aoleks Posts: 720 Forumite
    500 Posts First Anniversary Name Dropper
    I'm sorry, but this doesn't add up. No, mortgage affordability wasn't reduced overnight, not even for 95% mortgages. There's something else at play here and I have the feeling your broker is not the best. As I said, check the calculators above, they'll confirm what I say.

    Why are you applying with TSB, btw? would another bank work?
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