First time buyers looking to get on the housing ladder should consider a shared-equity mortgage, according to one expert.
Hayley Martin, team leader at Click n go Mortgages, explained that the deals are easy to obtain and see either a developer or local authority take a share in a property with a first time buyer .
She said: "Looking at the property ladder, deposits are the big thing holding people back and [with shared-equity mortgages] you don't have to put a deposit down if you don't have one."
Even though property prices are falling, deposits remain high which could mean that buying a home is still out of a first time buyers reach, she added.
The fact that renting is so expensive these days means that people will not have to pay much more each month for their mortgage, Ms Martin stated.
Under a shared-equity mortgage, the developer or local authority will own 15 per cent of the property, so initially the buyer only has to raise funds to pay for the remaining 85 per cent.
The owner then buys the outstanding part of the property over the next ten years.
