Online specialist mortgage broker Haysto ceases buy-to-let services

Online mortgage broker Haysto has confirmed that they will not be offering their services to buy-to-let landlords.

The brokers decision coincides with buy-to-let’s 25th year of going mainstream, and follows Haysto’s launch from an introducer platform to a fully-fledged brokerage.

The full statement from Haysto read: “2021 has been a big year for Haysto. We’ve grown a lot, learned what we’re good at, and what we want to focus on as a business.

“We moved from being an introducer platform to a brokerage, and helped thousands of people who never thought they’d be homeowners to get on the property ladder.

“But if we’re being honest, 2021 has probably been a sh*t year for many people.

“We know how hard some of our customers have worked. How hard they’ve saved to break out of expensive rent cycles. We know many of them have been needlessly told “no” when all they needed was to find a mortgage lender who’d listen and consider the story behind the numbers. We know how life-changing it’s been for them to finally own their own home, despite a system that’s stacked all the odds against them.

“So we’ve decided we’re going to focus on helping more people do the same. From now on, we’re saying “bye” to Buy to Let mortgages. Come to Haysto if you’re a first time buyer, home mover, or remortgaging your home. Landlords need not apply.

“It was buy-to-let’s 25th birthday in September this year. During this time, shrinking interest rates and growing rising house prices have persuaded more and more people to see housing as an investment, rather than a necessity. So the rental market got bigger, along with the price tag on UK homes.

“Here’s an example for context. Remember the early days of the pandemic? It feels like a blur for many of us. But during this time, a poignant image started circulating the internet. This image showed a poster on a lamppost that read:

“People are hoarding hand sanitiser.

“They’re driving the prices up because they’re buying all of it. Now they’re reselling it for higher prices and making huge profits. Some of them are charging ridiculous prices just to let other people use it. So now there are people who can’t afford it, even if there’s some available.

“Did I say hand sanitiser? I meant housing.

“In 1970, a modest house in the UK would cost you 3.9 times the average salary. In 2021, it’s almost 10 times the average salary. Stagnating wages and a shortage of houses means many deserving people are stuck paying extortionate rents.

“There’s around 4.4 million privately rented homes in the UK, but it’s by far the least affordable housing tenure. Private tenants are typically spending 41% of their income on rent. That’s almost half their hard-earned income gone, and that’s before bills, food and other necessities. In comparison, homeowners are spending far less, with 18% of their income going on their mortgages. Yet so many eligible people are locked out of the housing market. It isn’t affordable, and it isn’t fair.

“We’re not vilifying anyone who has a buy-to-let property, and we’re certainly not claiming to be able to fix the housing market. But as a business, we simply can’t justify adding to a problem that so many of our customers have been affected by.

“We want to make mortgages possible for people, not profit. To help people pay their own mortgages, not their landlord’s.

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