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Sharing The House Price When Selling
My wife is due to leave the family home soon and has tentatively agreed that her name stays on the mortgage and I pay it until it finishes or I sell and move.
The mortgage has around 6 years to go before it is completed. The mortgage is an endowment based scheme and it appears the endowment may not cover it all at the end by around £10,000.
My question is please, if she leaves now, over the next few years I am hoping to update it and therefore get a better selling price. Let's say for arguments sake the property is worth £100,000 now. With an update here and there the price goes up in value. Is she able to get half the new price difference?
In other words, should I get some house values now, so if there is a price increase, she only gets what she deserves when she leaves the property now please?
The mortgage has around 6 years to go before it is completed. The mortgage is an endowment based scheme and it appears the endowment may not cover it all at the end by around £10,000.
My question is please, if she leaves now, over the next few years I am hoping to update it and therefore get a better selling price. Let's say for arguments sake the property is worth £100,000 now. With an update here and there the price goes up in value. Is she able to get half the new price difference?
In other words, should I get some house values now, so if there is a price increase, she only gets what she deserves when she leaves the property now please?
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by merton69. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The short answer is that you need to worry about the ownership of the property, not who pays the mortgage. For example, do you know whether the house is registered at the Land Registry as joint tenants, or tenants in common.
Read this, perhaps, then see if you have further questions.
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Read this, perhaps, then see if you have further questions.
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Note the house will go up in value anyway, no matter if you do any work on it or not.
So if you come to value it in say 6 years time and it HAS gone up in value how much of that is natural increase and how much is for the work you have done, it will be hard to separate the two.
I would imagine if her name is on the mortgage and the land registry papers then she will get half the value of the house when time comes to sell no matter what you do.
The fact that you have paid the mortgage for the last 6 years will not count when it comes to splitting the house proceeds, she will still get half (in many marriages one person pays the mortgage but that does not mean they deserve more out of the house when it is sold).
You need to consider this very carefully, as you could pay the mortgage for 6 years, AND spend money doing up the house, and she will get half the house value anyway when it is sold.
So if you come to value it in say 6 years time and it HAS gone up in value how much of that is natural increase and how much is for the work you have done, it will be hard to separate the two.
I would imagine if her name is on the mortgage and the land registry papers then she will get half the value of the house when time comes to sell no matter what you do.
The fact that you have paid the mortgage for the last 6 years will not count when it comes to splitting the house proceeds, she will still get half (in many marriages one person pays the mortgage but that does not mean they deserve more out of the house when it is sold).
You need to consider this very carefully, as you could pay the mortgage for 6 years, AND spend money doing up the house, and she will get half the house value anyway when it is sold.
"I would imagine if her name is on the mortgage and the land registry papers then she will get half the value of the house when time comes to sell no matter what you do"
Not the case if the land title is held as tenants in common. Which is why I started by trying to help the OP by understanding some of the fundamentals, rather than making assumptions.
Not the case if the land title is held as tenants in common. Which is why I started by trying to help the OP by understanding some of the fundamentals, rather than making assumptions.
I dont think this is a question of law
I think it is a question of what you agreed at the time she left
both of you will sign the agreement
and you just as well find out what the law prescribes in these cases ( you cant be the first ) which you will note does NOT require agreement from your wife and adhere to that
I can easily foresee and perhaps you can
that at the time of sale one or other party will get out a calculator and think to themselves - "oo I could have got a better deal if I had gone to court " ....
and so they do
and this could bewhere you start
https:/ /en.wik ipedia. org/wik i/Stack _v_Dowd en
I think it is a question of what you agreed at the time she left
both of you will sign the agreement
and you just as well find out what the law prescribes in these cases ( you cant be the first ) which you will note does NOT require agreement from your wife and adhere to that
I can easily foresee and perhaps you can
that at the time of sale one or other party will get out a calculator and think to themselves - "oo I could have got a better deal if I had gone to court " ....
and so they do
and this could bewhere you start
https:/
Thank you for all your comments.
Wow! What a minefield!!!
Basically she is moving out and I am staying here with our two young children.
Her name will stay on the mortgage and endowment scheme.
The kitchen needs updating as it is still the original units. We were told when we thought about moving a few years ago that a new kitchen would majorly up the selling price. I was also looking to possibly add a conservatory as well. This will up the price from what it is today, so if I am the one putting in the £££££'s, why should she reap the benefits when she isn't here or contributing?
Wow! What a minefield!!!
Basically she is moving out and I am staying here with our two young children.
Her name will stay on the mortgage and endowment scheme.
The kitchen needs updating as it is still the original units. We were told when we thought about moving a few years ago that a new kitchen would majorly up the selling price. I was also looking to possibly add a conservatory as well. This will up the price from what it is today, so if I am the one putting in the £££££'s, why should she reap the benefits when she isn't here or contributing?
well yes or .... no
You did say she had agreed ....
but now you wonder what the law says ( it is a law thread ) which is kinda not by agreement. Courts commonly impose a settlement where one side deffo does NOT agree.
andit is always one side whips out a calculator and thinks blimey I have been ripped off ...
so I think it is sensible to get a lawyer or arbitration involved early
You did say she had agreed ....
but now you wonder what the law says ( it is a law thread ) which is kinda not by agreement. Courts commonly impose a settlement where one side deffo does NOT agree.
andit is always one side whips out a calculator and thinks blimey I have been ripped off ...
so I think it is sensible to get a lawyer or arbitration involved early
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