Q&A

What Happens to Equity Release When I Die?

Understanding what happens at the end of an equity release plan — and what your family or estate will need to do — is an important part of the decision. Here is a clear account of the process.

The loan is repaid from the sale of your property. Your executors have 12 months to arrange this. Any money left after repaying the loan passes to your estate.

The repayment trigger

A lifetime mortgage becomes repayable when one of two events occurs: your death, or your permanent move into long-term care. These are the standard repayment triggers for all lifetime mortgage products.

For a sole applicant, death is the most common trigger. For a joint plan (taken by a couple), the loan is not repayable until the second borrower has also died or entered permanent care — the surviving partner continues to live in the property on exactly the same terms as before.

Temporary stays in hospital or short-term respite care do not trigger repayment. The trigger is specifically permanent entry into residential or nursing care.

The 12-month repayment window

Once the repayment trigger occurs, most lenders allow the estate up to 12 months to arrange repayment. This is a standard feature of Equity Release Council-approved products and gives executors time to deal with probate, obtain valuations, and complete a property sale without being forced into a rushed transaction.

Interest continues to accrue during this period. The outstanding loan balance will therefore be slightly higher at the point of sale than it was at the date of death, but lenders do not charge additional penalties for the time taken to complete the sale within the 12-month window.

If the property has not been sold within 12 months, lenders will typically agree extensions in genuine cases — for example, where probate has been delayed or the property market is slow. Communication with the lender is important throughout this process.

What if the loan exceeds the property value?

The no-negative-equity guarantee, which is a mandatory feature of all Equity Release Council-approved products, protects the estate in precisely this situation. If the outstanding loan balance — including all accrued compound interest — exceeds the amount the property sells for, the lender absorbs the shortfall. Your estate owes nothing beyond the sale proceeds.

This guarantee means that no matter how long the plan has been running or how much interest has compounded, beneficiaries will not be left with a debt to pay. To learn more, see: What is a no-negative-equity guarantee?

Joint plans — what happens when one partner dies

On a joint lifetime mortgage, the death of one partner does not trigger repayment. The surviving borrower continues to live in the property under the same plan terms. The loan remains outstanding and interest continues to accrue, but the surviving partner has full security of tenure for the rest of their life or until they move into long-term care.

Only when the last surviving borrower dies or enters permanent care does repayment become due. At that point, the 12-month repayment window begins and the process described above applies.

For more detail on joint equity release plans, see: Can couples get equity release together?

What your executors need to do

When the repayment trigger occurs, the practical steps for your executors or next of kin are:

  1. Notify the lender — inform the lender of the death or care entry as soon as reasonably possible. The lender will confirm the outstanding balance and the repayment process.
  2. Obtain probate — if you have a will, your executor applies for a grant of probate. This authorises them to deal with your estate, including the property.
  3. Arrange a valuation and sale — the property is typically sold on the open market. In some cases, beneficiaries may wish to retain the property by repaying the loan from other estate funds or by taking out a new mortgage.
  4. Repay the loan from sale proceeds — the lender is repaid from the proceeds of the sale. Any surplus after repaying the outstanding loan and accrued interest is distributed to the beneficiaries of the estate.

For a broader understanding of how equity release affects your estate and inheritance, see our full guide: Equity Release and Inheritance.

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

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