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Can I Buy An Over 55s Property for a Parent or Grandparent?

Answered on 10 March 2026

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Can a young person buy a retirement property for their parents or grandparent? My husband and I wish to buy a property with an over 55 years age restriction on the resident. We would be buying this property for my grandparent to live in. We would need a minimal mortgage of approximately 50% LTV, on a property worth £70,000. Is this possible?

Answered by: Nicholas Mendes

Sometimes, yes. A younger buyer can purchase an over-55s property for an older relative to live in, but it depends on the lease and on whether a lender is willing to take the resale risk.

At 50% LTV on a £70,000 property, it’s not impossible. The challenge is usually the age restriction wording, plus leasehold costs and saleability, rather than the deposit.

First check: does the restriction apply to ownership, or just occupancy?

This is the key detail to confirm with the selling agent and the solicitor.

Many retirement developments restrict who can live there (occupancy) rather than who can own it, but some do place conditions on ownership or require the occupier to be an approved “qualifying” resident under the lease. It varies by development.

Ask for the lease wording and look for:

  • the minimum age for the resident (often 55/60, sometimes with joint-occupancy rules)
  • whether the resident must be the owner, or can be a family member
  • rules on carers/guests staying overnight
  • any requirement for landlord/managing agent consent to occupation

Mortgage reality: why these properties are harder to finance

Lenders can be cautious because the resale market is narrower.

Common lender concerns include:

  • restricted buyer pool if repossession ever happened (age/occupancy rules)
  • high or escalating service charges relative to property value
  • onerous lease terms (transfer fees/event fees, restrictions on letting, short lease length)

The “small price tag” issue (£70,000)

A £35,000 mortgage sounds modest, but it can still be tricky.

Some lenders have:

  • minimum loan sizes (often around £25,000–£30,000+, sometimes higher), and/or
  • minimum property values, and/or
  • restrictions where service charges are high relative to the property value (more common in later-life products)

So the numbers can work, but lender choice may be narrower than you’d expect.

Costs to check before you commit

Retirement properties can come with ongoing costs and “event” fees that affect affordability and resale.

Make sure you understand:

  • service charge level and what it covers
  • ground rent and review pattern
  • any sinking/contingency fund contributions
  • event/exit/transfer fees on resale or other trigger points

Resale: think about the exit before you buy

Even if you’re buying for a grandparent now, you’ll want a plan for later.

A practical sense-check is: “If we had to sell this in 6–12 months, how easy would it be, and who would buy it?” Retirement flats can be slower to sell if costs are high or lease terms are restrictive.

Alternatives if the mortgage route is difficult

If lenders won’t play ball, common alternatives are:

  • buying in the grandparent’s name (if they’re eligible for later-life lending), with family support where appropriate
  • buying cash (if possible) and keeping flexibility on resale timing
  • choosing a non-age-restricted property that still meets accessibility needs (wider mortgage market)

What to do next

  1. Get the lease and confirm: occupancy restriction vs ownership restriction.
  2. Ask for a full breakdown of service charges, ground rent, and any event fees.
  3. Speak to a broker early, with the lease summary, purchase price and LTV — we can quickly confirm which lenders are realistic before you spend on legals and surveys.

Please call 023 8235 2300 and we will then be able to help you find the right solution.

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Ask The Mortgage Experts answers are based on the information provided and do not constitute advice under the Financial Services & Markets Act. They reflect the personal views of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views, positions, strategies or opinions of John Charcol. All comments are made in good faith, and John Charcol will not accept liability for them. We recommend you seek professional advice with regard to any of these topics where appropriate.

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