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    First-time buyer step-by-step — UK 2026/27

    Buying your first home is one of the largest financial decisions you'll ever make and the process has at least 14 distinct steps spread over 3-6 months. Most first-time buyer guides focus on the deposit and the mortgage and skip everything else. This walkthrough covers all 14 steps in order, the realistic costs (you'll need at least £3,000-£8,000 in cash beyond the deposit), the timing of each step, and the decisions that materially affect the cost and outcome.

    Educational only. Property purchase is legally complex and locally variable. Always use a regulated conveyancer / solicitor and a regulated mortgage broker. Not financial or legal advice.

    The 14-step UK first-time buyer journey

    1. Check your credit file and finances
    2. Save your deposit (5-20%+)
    3. Get a Mortgage in Principle (MIP / DIP)
    4. Research and view properties
    5. Make an offer
    6. Have the offer accepted — the property goes "sold subject to contract"
    7. Choose a solicitor / conveyancer
    8. Apply for the full mortgage
    9. Mortgage valuation + property survey
    10. Searches (local authority, environmental, water/drainage)
    11. Mortgage offer issued
    12. Exchange of contracts (you're legally committed at this point)
    13. Completion (move-in day; ownership transfers)
    14. Post-completion (Land Registry, SDLT return, mortgage protection)

    Average timeline: 3-6 months from offer accepted to completion. Faster (8-12 weeks) for chain-free purchases of new builds; slower for complex chains or freehold/leasehold complications.

    Step 1: Check your credit file

    Mortgage lenders pull your credit file as the first underwriting check. Before applying, check your own (free) so you know what they'll see:

    Common issues to fix before applying for a mortgage:

    Allow 3-6 months to fix significant credit issues before applying for a mortgage.

    Step 2: Save your deposit

    UK first-time buyer deposit minimums in 2026/27:

    Deposit % LTV (loan-to-value) Rate availability For a £250k home
    5%95% LTVLimited lenders; higher rates£12,500 deposit
    10%90% LTVWide availability; moderate rates£25,000
    15%85% LTVBetter rates available£37,500
    20%80% LTVSignificantly better rates£50,000
    25%+75% LTV or lowerBest rates£62,500+

    Mortgage rate gap by LTV: a 5% deposit (95% LTV) typically costs 0.5-1.0% more in interest rate than a 25% deposit (75% LTV). On a £200k mortgage over 25 years, that's roughly £15,000-£25,000 of extra interest. Saving more deposit pays for itself.

    Government help with deposits

    Step 3: Mortgage in Principle (MIP)

    An MIP (also called "DIP" for Decision in Principle, or "AIP" for Agreement in Principle) is a quick assessment from a mortgage lender of approximately how much they'd lend you, based on a soft credit check and your declared finances.

    Get an MIP before you start viewing properties. It tells you what price range you should look in and gives credibility to your offers.

    Step 4: Research and view properties

    Standard process:

    UK property listings can be misleading. View in person before making an offer; photos and floor plans hide a lot.

    Step 5: Making an offer

    UK offers are usually verbal initially (via the estate agent), then confirmed in writing. The asking price is the starting point; offers below are common:

    The estate agent works for the seller. They want the highest price. Friendly but adversarial relationship.

    Step 6: Offer accepted — "sold subject to contract"

    When your offer is accepted, the property is "sold subject to contract" (STC). This is NOT legally binding — either party can withdraw at any time before exchange of contracts (potentially weeks later). About 30-40% of UK property sales fall through between offer and exchange (data: Quick Move Now).

    Common reasons sales fall through:

    Be prepared for this. Don't get emotionally attached to a property until exchange.

    Step 7: Choose a solicitor / conveyancer

    You need a regulated conveyancer or solicitor to handle the legal transfer. Costs:

    "Disbursements" are fees the conveyancer pays on your behalf: searches (£200-£400), Land Registry fee (£40-£330 based on property value), bank transfer fees (£25-£50), AML checks (£6-£15).

    Total typical legal cost: £1,500-£2,500 all-in for a standard freehold purchase. Leaseholds and complex purchases more.

    Step 8: Apply for the full mortgage

    The full mortgage application requires substantial documentation:

    Lender does a "hard" credit search at this stage. The lender's underwriter checks affordability against the property price and proposed mortgage. Decisions can take 2-4 weeks.

    Step 9: Mortgage valuation + property survey

    Two separate things often confused:

    Mortgage valuation (basic)

    A short valuation the lender uses to confirm the property is worth roughly what you're paying. Often a desktop valuation (no inspection). Cost typically included in mortgage product or £0-£500. Protects the LENDER, not you.

    Property survey (recommended for you)

    An inspection of the property by a chartered surveyor to identify problems.

    Skipping the survey is a false economy — finding a £15,000 damp issue or roof problem after completion vs £700 to identify it beforehand is a huge difference.

    Step 10: Searches

    Your conveyancer orders various searches:

    Search results take 1-4 weeks. Costs included in conveyancer's disbursements (£200-£400).

    Step 11: Mortgage offer issued

    If underwriting approves and the valuation is satisfactory, the lender issues a formal mortgage offer. Valid typically 3-6 months. Contains the loan amount, rate, term, repayment method (repayment vs interest-only) and all conditions.

    Read the mortgage offer carefully. Mistakes happen and are easier to fix before exchange.

    Step 12: Exchange of contracts

    The point of no return. Both buyer and seller sign contracts; deposit (typically 10% of purchase price — can be your full deposit if you have one) is paid to the seller's solicitor. From exchange:

    Step 13: Completion

    The day you move in:

    Typical timing: 1-4 weeks after exchange, but same-day exchange-and-completion is possible (and common for chain-free purchases).

    Step 14: Post-completion

    The 2-4 weeks after moving in:

    Total cost beyond the deposit

    Cost Typical amount
    SDLT (first-time buyer relief)£0-£6,250 depending on price
    Conveyancing + disbursements£1,500-£2,500
    Property survey (Level 2)£500-£900
    Mortgage valuation£0-£500 (often included)
    Mortgage broker fee (if used)£0-£500
    Buildings insurance (first year)£200-£500
    Moving costs (van / movers)£500-£2,000
    Total beyond deposit£3,000-£13,000+

    Do you need a mortgage broker?

    A mortgage broker (also called a mortgage adviser) compares mortgages across the market and recommends the best fit. Two types:

    Broker fees: usually paid by commission from the lender (no fee to you), sometimes a flat fee £200-£500.

    For first-time buyers, a whole-of-market broker is almost always worth using. They know which lenders are most likely to accept your specific profile, can navigate complex affordability calculations, and add real value for free. Examples: London & Country (free; whole of market), Habito, Mortgage Advice Bureau.

    Frequently asked questions

    How much can I borrow?

    Most lenders offer ~4.5x annual gross income (single applicant) or combined income for joint mortgages. So £40,000 income = ~£180,000 mortgage. Some lenders go higher (5-5.5x) for higher earners or specific circumstances. Use our mortgage calculator for a rough estimate, then get a Mortgage in Principle for the real lender view.

    How long does the whole process take?

    From accepted offer to completion: typical 3-4 months for a chain-free purchase, 4-6 months with a chain. Faster is possible (8-10 weeks) for organised buyers with cash purchases or new builds.

    What's gazumping?

    The seller accepts a higher offer from another buyer after already accepting yours, before exchange of contracts. Legal in England & Wales; widely disliked. Some buyers use "lock-out agreements" or "exclusivity periods" to prevent it — the seller agrees not to entertain other offers for a defined period in exchange for a fee.

    Is it cheaper to buy or rent in 2026?

    Depends entirely on location and your time horizon. Use our rent vs buy calculator to model specific scenarios. Short-term (under 5 years), renting is often cheaper. Long-term (10+ years), buying typically wins on cumulative cost — if you can afford the deposit and mortgage payments.

    Should I buy a leasehold flat?

    Leaseholds add complexity: ground rent, service charges, lease length (mortgage lenders typically want 80+ years remaining), potential leasehold extension costs. Modern UK government policy is moving away from new leaseholds. For first-time buyers, freehold houses are simpler; leasehold flats can be fine but require careful conveyancing.

    What if I'm self-employed?

    Self-employed mortgage applications need 2-3 years of accounts or tax returns (SA302). Recent self-employed (under 2 years) can struggle to find lenders. Specialist self-employed mortgage brokers can help find lenders that accept your specific situation.

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