Guide

How Much Can I Release with Equity Release?

The amount you can release through equity release depends on three main factors: your age, the value of your property, and your health and lifestyle. Lenders express their limits as a percentage of your property value — known as the loan-to-value or LTV ratio — and older applicants can typically borrow a higher percentage. Online calculators give estimates, but only a regulated adviser can confirm what is actually available to you.

The key factors

Every equity release lender has its own criteria for determining the maximum loan available, but the factors they all consider follow a common pattern:

Loan-to-value ratios by age

The table below gives indicative LTV ranges by age and shows illustrative amounts for a £300,000 property. These are not guarantees — actual figures depend on the lender, the specific product, your health, and the property assessment.

AgeTypical LTV RangeExample: £300,000 property
5520–28%£60,000–£84,000
6025–33%£75,000–£99,000
6530–38%£90,000–£114,000
7035–44%£105,000–£132,000
7540–50%£120,000–£150,000
80+45–55%+£135,000–£165,000+

Figures are illustrative only. Actual LTV depends on lender, product, and individual circumstances. Rates and maximum LTVs change regularly — confirm current figures with a qualified adviser.

The role of health and lifestyle

Enhanced lifetime mortgages — sometimes called impaired life products — can make a significant difference to how much you can borrow. If you qualify, you may be able to access a higher LTV than the standard table suggests, or receive a lower interest rate, or both.

Conditions that commonly qualify for enhancement include cardiovascular disease, diabetes, stroke, certain cancers, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and obesity above certain BMI thresholds. Being a smoker — past or present — can also qualify you for enhanced terms. The qualifying criteria vary between lenders.

It is always worth discussing your health history with an adviser before assuming the standard LTV table applies to you. Many homeowners are surprised to find they qualify for enhanced terms, and the difference in the maximum loan amount can be tens of thousands of pounds.

Property value and minimum thresholds

Most equity release lenders require a minimum property value of £70,000–£100,000, though some specialist lenders accept lower values. Properties at the lower end of the value range may face a more restricted choice of products.

Some lenders also have regional restrictions — particularly for properties in areas where they consider the resale market to be thin or volatile. Unusual property types (converted commercial buildings, listed properties, high-rise flats, non-standard construction) may also limit the number of lenders willing to lend, though specialist options often exist.

The lender's valuation is independent of any estate agent valuation you may have received. If you believe your property's value has been assessed incorrectly, you can discuss this with your adviser and, in some cases, commission a second opinion.

Drawdown: accessing more over time

With a drawdown lifetime mortgage, the LTV table determines your total facility — but you do not have to draw all of it immediately. You take an initial sum at completion and reserve the right to draw further funds later, up to the agreed maximum.

This means the total amount available to you over the life of the plan may be higher than you actually need at the outset. Many homeowners set up a drawdown facility as a financial safety net — knowing funds are available if needed for care costs, home repairs, or other future needs — while keeping their initial drawdown (and therefore their interest costs) as low as possible.

Note that the interest rate on future drawdowns may differ from the rate fixed at the outset, depending on the product. This is an important point to clarify when selecting a plan.

What reduces the amount available?

Several factors can reduce the loan amount available below the standard LTV table figure:

Getting an accurate figure

Online equity release calculators — including those on comparison sites — can provide a useful starting estimate. However, they work from broad assumptions and cannot account for your specific health, property type, or the full range of products available from different lenders.

The only way to get an accurate, personalised figure is to work with a qualified, whole-of-market equity release adviser. They will gather information about your age, property, health, and circumstances, and use this to identify the actual products available to you and the maximum amounts each would offer. This process typically involves no obligation to proceed.

For more on how equity release works once you know the amount, see our guide to how equity release works. For information on costs, see equity release costs and fees.

Want to understand your options? Speak to a specialist later-life lending adviser. No obligation — just plain-English answers to your questions.

Ask a Question