New mortgage rules complicate renovations for low-capital households

On April 1, the mortgage ceiling rises to 90 percent, but additional loans after purchase are capped at 80 percent of the home's value. Two housing economists warn that this affects young people, low-income earners, and families needing to renovate their homes. The rules risk creating discrimination and delaying necessary maintenance.

The government is introducing new mortgage rules to counter overconsumption and prevent households from using homes as collateral for purchases like cars. Under the proposal, the general mortgage ceiling increases from 85 to 90 percent for home purchases on April 1. However, additional loans after purchase are limited to a maximum of 80 percent of the home's value, and revaluation due to price increases can only occur after five years, unless a significant change happens.

The experts note that there is no empirical evidence that Swedes extensively use homes as security for pure consumption. Instead, unsecured credits often lead to financial troubles. The new rules may force households needing renovations to take more expensive unsecured loans or amortize existing loans for several years before additional mortgages are possible.

An example illustrates the impact: Two equivalent households buy identical houses. Household A pays 6 million SEK for one in top condition and borrows 5.4 million. Household B pays 5.8 million for one requiring a 200,000 SEK roof renovation and borrows 5.22 million. To finance the renovation with a mortgage, Household B must amortize down to 4.44 million SEK, a reduction of 780,000 SEK, which takes 7.5 years at 2 percent amortization. This creates unfair treatment based on renovation needs.

The rules primarily affect low-capital households, such as young families and those with immigrant backgrounds, and may delay maintenance with risks of damage. They also hinder energy efficiency measures under EU directives and the purpose of the ROT deduction, negatively impacting the construction sector. An alternative is to allow conversion of unsecured loans for renovations to mortgages up to 90 percent against receipts, reducing the adverse effects.

Makala yanayohusiana

Realistic photo illustrating the Trump administration's 50-year mortgage idea, with White House officials and economic charts highlighting affordability debates.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Trump administration floats 50-year mortgages amid affordability crunch

Imeripotiwa na AI Picha iliyoundwa na AI Imethibitishwa ukweli

The White House is weighing whether federal housing agencies should explore 50-year mortgages to lower monthly payments. Supporters have called the idea a potential game changer, while housing economists and even some conservative allies warn it would raise lifetime borrowing costs and slow equity building.

Financial authorities are reviewing measures to curb loan extensions for owners of multiple homes in regulated areas of the greater Seoul region to cool the overheated real estate market. The Financial Services Commission plans to hold a meeting on Tuesday with major banks to discuss revamping these practices. This comes as the exemption from heavy capital gains tax for multiple homeowners expires in May.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Mortgage rates for ten-year loans in Germany have reached their highest level in over two years, averaging 3.85 percent. This rise is linked to increasing yields on federal bonds, which recently stood at 2.87 percent. Experts forecast a further moderate upward trend in 2026.

President Gustavo Petro blamed the Banco de la República's high interest rates for the housing sector's contraction, which has seen 10 consecutive quarters of decline. The leader stated that these positive and growing real rates have prevented users from affording payments. Analysts, however, emphasize the drop in social interest housing as the main factor.

Imeripotiwa na AI

The alliance 'Soziales Wohnen' has presented the Social Housing Monitor 2026, highlighting an acute shortage of affordable housing in Germany. Currently, around 1.4 million rental apartments are missing, severely affecting students and immigrants. Experts warn of a social disaster that could exacerbate the skilled labor shortage.

The French government introduces a new fiscal device, dubbed 'Jeanbrun' or 'private landlord status', to encourage investments in new and old rental housing. Announced as part of the 2026 finance bill, it replaces the Pinel scheme and aims to cut taxes through annual amortization. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu sets the ambitious goal of building 2 million homes by 2030.

Imeripotiwa na AI

The National Assembly's finance commission rejected the Zucman tax on very high patrimonies on Monday, October 20, proposed by the left. Deputies from the government coalition and the National Rally voted against this amendment, which aimed to impose a 2% minimum on patrimonies over 100 million euros. The debate will continue in the hemicycle starting Friday.

Jumanne, 24. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 08:53:29

Black-red coalition agrees on heating law reform

Jumatatu, 23. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 07:51:00

Cabinet approves decree resuming heavier capital gains tax on multiple homes

Alhamisi, 19. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 01:54:18

South Africans share property ladder lessons from readers

Jumamosi, 7. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 07:29:08

Banks inject EGP 99.5bn into low- and middle-income mortgage initiatives by January 2026

Jumatano, 4. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 08:43:56

South African property market recovery eases home buying in 2026

Jumapili, 28. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 10:22:01

Construction sector celebrates minha casa minha vida readjustment

Ijumaa, 26. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 09:19:30

Lenders test crypto-backed mortgages for unconventional borrowers

Jumapili, 21. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 15:01:01

New laws to affect Swedish economy in 2026

Jumanne, 25. Mwezi wa kumi na moja 2025, 20:41:33

Banks' lending rates fall in October despite mortgage uptick

Jumatatu, 17. Mwezi wa kumi na moja 2025, 03:37:54

Government raises KUR ceiling to Rp320 trillion for 2026

 

 

 

Tovuti hii inatumia vidakuzi

Tunatumia vidakuzi kwa uchambuzi ili kuboresha tovuti yetu. Soma sera ya faragha yetu kwa maelezo zaidi.
Kataa