Top tips for decorating your home this Christmas

Top tips for decorating your home this Christmas


In this month's edition, we're on hand to offer our top tips for decorating your home for this festive season, we ask if the 100% mortgage should be reintroduced and there's news on an extension for the Help to Buy scheme.


Top tips for decorating your home this Christmas

 
Yes, it really is that time of year again. Decking the halls is practically obligatory for all of us during the Christmas period, and with so much pressure on presenting a perfectly preened pine tree and creating a winter wonderland so festive that reindeer land on your roof, here are a few tips to help you create a Christmas to remember.

The Tree
For many of us, the focal point of the Christmas decorations is the tree itself and that presents a few initial decisions – the first being the choice between real or artificial. In recent years, the difference between real and artificial trees has narrowed quite substantially, meaning that many of us are now opting for the longer-lasting artificial tree. However, if you like the traditional option of a fresh tree then consider delaying putting it up by a week or so to ensure that it is still looking its best on Christmas morning – one traditional suggestion would be to wait until 12 days before Christmas on December 13th.

Chic or classic
The next decision for that all-important tree is around the decorations themselves; do you go for a chic colour scheme straight from the pages of Vogue or for the traditional charm? If you choose to go for a colour scheme, then keep it clean and simple – whites and silvers are understated and elegant, lending themselves to most homes. Also, to ensure that your tree has maximum impact then extend the theme into its surroundings and decorate the rest of the room in the same colour palette as your tree. If you shy away from ‘fashionable’ trees and colour-matched accessories, then the traditional Christmas accoutrements of home-made baubles, paper snowflakes and vintage accessories are probably more in-line with your Christmas aesthetic. Dust off those tree decorations given to you by friends and family, made by your children or passed down through the generations and showcase them on your tree of choice; just make sure that they are evenly distributed so they get the admiration that they deserve.

Twinkle, Twinkle
When it comes to Christmas decorations, one thing that never goes out of style is a little bit of sparkle! Having lots of reflective decorations around the home really helps to set a festive atmosphere – think lots of candles of different sizes (it’s nice to play with heights of candles for a little more interest) and tealights in crystal glasses. All of the sparkling candles and crystal reflections will set a truly magical tone throughout your home and turn even the most Scrooge-like guests into Christmas converts.

Stairway to Christmas Heaven
Don’t neglect surfaces such as mantelpieces and staircases, if you really want to have the maximum impact whilst decorating for Christmas. Using offcuts from real trees, lining the handrail of your staircase with branches decants an intoxicating smell of Christmas around your home. When it comes to surfaces such as mantlepieces, use fruit centrepieces to create a feeling of decadence, with very little expense.

Light it up
For many of us, decorating outside of the home seems like an awful lot of effort for such a short period, however when it comes to adding that touch of festive flavour to the outdoors it doesn’t have to be a lighting extravaganza. Thanks to the homemade delights of Kirstie Allsopp, the Christmas wreath is storming back into fashion for 2018, with ever-more people opting to create their own wreaths. Simply pick out some choice items for your door wreath – such as pinecones, pine tree branches, fruit and ornaments - and adhere them to a wire frame in the shape of a circle and voilà – your outdoor decorations are complete.

Of course, that’s not to say that seeing a home adorned with many a Christmas light doesn’t still stir up that feeling of childhood Christmas excitement in all of us, so if that’s your plan for the exterior of your home, then we insist that you go ahead and light it up!
 



Help to Buy scheme extended until 2023

 
The Government’s Help to Buy scheme has been extremely successful, with a duality in its accomplishments; firstly, in encouraging people to take a step on to the property ladder and secondly, in encouraging housebuilders to develop new homes in the knowledge that they have a government-backed safety net of potential buyers, just waiting to purchase their newly-built homes. With the news from the recent Budget that the scheme which is due to end in April 2021 will be extended, albeit in a new format, by two years prospective buyers should be buoyed by the government decision.

Help to Buy will have been in existence for a decade by the time the extended period finishes and is available to first-time buyers as well as current homeowners looking to trade up on the property ladder. Essentially, the scheme provides a government-backed loan to people who want to buy a new home but cannot afford the deposit. For developments participating in the scheme, you only need a 5% deposit (ie. &10,000 for a home worth &200,000) and the government then lends 20% of the cost (topping up the deposit), with the remaining 75% consisting of a mortgage. The 20% loan from the government is also exempt from fees for the first five years of the scheme.

The extra two years of Help to Buy will be available to first-time buyers throughout the UK for houses worth up to a new regional price cap, rather than the current scheme’s cap of &600,000. As well as new regionalised limits for the equity loan, the scheme will solely be available to first-time buyers whereas currently, you do not have to be new to the property market in order to buy through the scheme – a fact which very few are aware of.

The scheme in its current guise has helped more than 300,000 people purchase a property, all of which have been new-build homes. It is this interaction between buyers and new-build homes which has helped to answer the ever-increasing demand for properties across the UK, and with the scheme forecast to end in 2023, there will surely be an impact upon the ready availability of new homes from this point onwards.

Housebuilders have had the luxury of a steady supply of buyers ready to purchase through Help to Buy who otherwise would not have been able to purchase their properties, and after 2023 there is the real possibility of a slowdown in new building projects due to the cessation of Help to Buy. Companies such as Barratt, Taylor Wimpey and Persimmon have reaped the rewards of the scheme since its introduction in 2013 with around 40% to 50% of their sales from Help to Buy homes.

For five years, potential homebuyers have been able to purchase properties which would otherwise have been outside their price range – and for first-time buyers, in particular, this has allowed a first foray into property ownership. The announcement of an extension to the length of this scheme should therefore encourage potential buyers to take the plunge, and allow building firms to continue to reap the rewards of a particularly lucrative sector of the property market.



Should the 100% mortgage be reintroduced?

 
A recent poll from YouGov suggests that almost half of the United Kingdom think that the re-introduction of the 100% mortgage is a good idea. A total of 9,713 people were included in the government survey and participants were asked whether borrowing the entire cost of a home is either a ‘good idea’, ‘bad idea’ or ‘unsure’. Almost half of those surveyed, 48%, stated that the reintroduction would be a ‘good idea’ and almost a third regarded the borrowing as a ‘bad idea’ – showing that there is some consternation around the subject.

Currently, a total of nine lenders offer a 100% (or ‘loan-to-value’) mortgage. However, there are conditions around the borrowing option in its current format. In order to apply for a 100% mortgage, and depending on the mortgage provider, you must either have a guarantor who has a property to act as collateral against the mortgage or you will have a ringfenced amount of savings which can act as security (essentially making it an offset mortgage).

The suggestion to reintroduce the 100% mortgage would circumvent the necessity for guarantors or separate security accounts and could therefore help those who are struggling to take that first step on to the property ladder. Legal & General Mortgage Club head of lender relationships Danny Belton disputes whether the reintroduction of this type of lending would be beneficial, however, stating “the thinking and rationale behind the return of 100% LTV mortgage is interesting, but this is not the solution to the current issues facing first time buyers.”

Belton continues to critique the 100% mortgage, offering: “At the very least it would mean lenders would have to significantly increase the amount of capital they would be required to hold, which is just not sustainable. What would be more beneficial is for more buyers to utilise schemes such as shared ownership and Help to Buy, or even make use of a guarantor mortgage.”

In terms of age groups, the poll returned some interesting results, with 46% of those aged 18 to 24 responding positively to the proposition, compared to 49% of those aged 65 and over considering it a poor idea. The disparity in the age groups could be linked to the differences in the stages of property ownership; there’s the younger survey participants that are keen to get on the property market and are therefore more responsive, whilst the older participants have a higher likelihood of already owning a property and are thus more circumspect when faced with new propositions, such as the 100% mortgage.

Although the initial prospect of a mortgage for the full value of a property may appeal to potential buyers struggling to get on to the property market, the realities of living with such debt and the inflexibilities around it could dissuade the majority. The YouGov survey clearly demonstrates that younger people are keen to buy property and hence any new prospects which may help them in this endeavour will be well-received.

However, as Danny Belton has stated, there are several alternatives available to help people onto the property market. Those considering the 100% mortgage to be a good prospect should look into shared ownership schemes and Help to Buy before plunging into the loan-to-value option, no matter how attractive the prospect may appear on first glance.