All posts tagged Aviva

Aviva is one equity release company providing retired or near retirement homeowners a chance to improve their cash poor situation. If you have entered retirement and find you are spending your retirement pension too fast there are only a couple of things you can do. You can adjust your lifestyle, downsize, or find a way to supplement your income. Equity release products such as the Aviva Lump Sum Max plan is a lifetime mortgage. To find out how this product can help you there are necessary tools like the Aviva equity release calculator available to you.

How Aviva Works
Aviva provides certain products for individuals over the age of 55. However, their products are announced on sites like Equity Release Supermarket and through a brokerage firm. If you go directly to their website, select the product shown, you will be sent to a brokerage firm that is not independent. They do not offer independent equity release advice. It is an agreement they have made with Aviva. It also means the product mentioned on Aviva’s website and through this tied sales team is not as competitive as Aviva products you can find on Equity Release Supermarket. You can use the safety net of a company you recognise and trust by choosing Aviva, but you do need to be aware the product may be a poorer deal for your beneficiaries on the long term.

Lifetime Mortgages
Lifetime mortgages are a loan for retired individuals because you make no payment towards the principle amount. There are only a few products which are interest only, where you do make an interest payment each month, but the product is not repaid in full until the end of your life. The Max Lump Sum plan from Aviva is a straightforward lifetime mortgage in that you make no repayments and pay no interest until the end. When you die or need long term care your loan will need to be repaid, often through the sale of your home. This is where it can become difficult for your beneficiaries. The sale of the home has to cover the capital sum plus any interest that has accrued. The more interest that accrues the less that is left over.

When you have a non-competitive product this means the interest rate is not in line with other equity release products. It could be significantly higher than competitive products found through independent brokers.

Independent Brokers
An independent broker is going to look for the best product for you. They will find the lowest interest rate for the maximum amount of value possible. You get to decide the best deal. Sometimes you may have to go for a higher interest rate to unlock the maximum amount you need.

An equity release calculator can be used to determine the maximum amount to be released such as 30% at age 65 versus 40% at 75. You can change items in the calculator to fit the competitive products on the market; however, Aviva equity release calculator does not allow for this. The Aviva tool is specific to the Aviva Lump Sum Max Plan. It will not provide results for any other plan even other Aviva products sold on independent sites. It limits your knowledge of available options. An independent calculator would not do this.

The Products on the Market
Aviva, Pure Retirement, and Just Retirement offer some of the equity release lifetime mortgage products on the market right now. At age 65 all offer 30% of the home value in a loan to value percentage based on age and home value. The percentage allows for the accrual of interest while keeping the loan low enough that it should not hit negative equity.

The older you are the more you can release which is why at age 75 you could get 41% from Aviva and 42% from Pure Retirement. Pure Retirement also offers free valuation, the larger cash back option, and no application fee if the loan is for more than £45,000.

Overall, you want to make certain you are working with an independent tool to get the best information possible. It may turn out for your needs and situation Aviva is the perfect company to go with through the brokerage firm. On the other hand you may find the Aviva equity release calculator results are not apropos for your situation and thus you need to shop around more. Using independent tools you can save time in your research.

Searching for an equity release calculator for the under 55s is unfortunately not going to produce the results you hope for. Yet, many people do conduct a search online for this tool, which is one reason many websites and articles use the keyword to get your attention. There are some important facts you need to understand about equity release for retirees. The first is that equity release (ER) is for individuals over 55. Since it is a minimum age, there is not going to be a calculator that provides a calculation for an individual who is younger than this. One of the reasons the phrase is still used and targeted is because of planning.

People who want to plan for their retirement can find the calculator useful as they plan for their retirement day. The calculator can certainly provide some details that will help with the planning.

What ER Calculators Provide
As an equity release calculator for the under 55s does not exist, you will need to use a standard equity release mortgage calculator. It can still provide you with helpful information. You can also look for such options as the impaired equity release calculator that provides results for potential ill health issues. Impaired health allows you to gain a larger lump sum of tax-free cash than a healthier retiree. Of course, if you do not need a bigger sum of cash, it is best to stick with the standard ER. You also have calculators specifically for interest only lifetime mortgage products and home reversion.

An interest only lifetime mortgage provides you with a capital lump sum where you pay interest off each month to keep that sum the same throughout the life of the loan. Every lifetime mortgage will have interest and the entire amount is due at death or a move to a long term care facility. Basically, when you move from your home you need to pay it back. With interest only it is more affordable and leaves an inheritance behind if you pay off the interest, versus a loan that accrues until death, leaving a large sum to be repaid.

With appreciation and depreciation a home value can change and wipe out any inheritance if you have interest adding to the loan too.

Home reversion is different because it is a sale of all or part of your home. With the sale you still live rent free under a lifetime tenancy agreement, you can stay until death or until you decide to move to long term care, and only at the end is the rest of the house sold to the buyer. Any home left to sell is converted to cash for your beneficiaries. Buyers are investing in the appreciation of the home as a way to make their money.

ER calculators will be able to provide you with a potential maximum amount you can be lent, along with figures for what you may owe in the end. This gives you an idea of whether the option is affordable for you or not.

Possible Products
The market is flooded with products as more people begin to retire. Also changes to the regulations of these loans have meant a change in availability of certain products. The calculator uses the age of the person, plus the home value, to determine the maximum amount allowable. A loan to value percentage is the maximum amount for a specific age a person can obtain.

For example, Aviva is offering a product to 55 year olds where you receive 20.5% of your home value in an ER loan. Stonehaven’s Interest Select Max (interest only loan) provides 19% of the home value.

The older you are the higher your loan to value ratio will be on the assumption the loan will not be outstanding for as long. Thus, someone 65 years of age from Aviva can receive 30% of the home value in an ER. The Stonehaven ISM plan offers 29%. If you go with Aviva and are 65 years of age with a home value of £100K you would receive £30,000 in a maximum amount.

You should be aware that not all providers offer 55 year olds ERs. For example Just Retirement, LV=, New Life, and Pure Retirement require you to be 60 years old at least. This will change the calculations you receive from the ER calculator. As no equity release calculator for under 55s exists, just make certain you use an independent calculator that can provide accurate results for your situation.