For most UK high-street lenders, no – they won’t take an EU property as “extra security” against a UK mortgage in the way people often mean it. They will generally lend against the UK property only, and price/underwrite the deal on that basis.
Where it can happen is in more bespoke situations (often private banks / specialist lenders) where they can take, value and enforce security in the overseas jurisdiction. That’s the exception rather than the rule.
Why it’s difficult in practice
Using an overseas property as collateral isn’t just a policy issue — it’s a legal one.
A lender would need to be able to:
- take a valid charge over the property under that country’s law
- register it in the local land/property system
- value it reliably and keep that valuation under review
- enforce the security if needed (in a different jurisdiction, language, court system)
That complexity is why most mainstream UK lenders avoid it.
What usually is possible instead
If the goal is to improve your UK mortgage position, these are the routes that tend to be realistic:
1) Raise capital against your UK property
If you have sufficient equity and affordability, you can increase borrowing on the UK home (remortgage / further advance) and keep the overseas property separate.
This is often the cleanest option because the lender only needs UK security.
2) Use a lender with international/private banking capability
Some private banks and specialist lenders can consider cross-collateral arrangements or wider asset-backed structures, especially for higher-value cases. This is bespoke, and documentation and costs are typically heavier.
3) Finance against the overseas property in its own country
Depending on where the property is and your circumstances, you may be able to borrow locally against that property and keep your UK mortgage renegotiation separate.
What lenders will ask you anyway
Even if the overseas property isn’t being used as security, it still matters.
When you “renegotiate” (product transfer or remortgage), lenders may ask about:
- existing mortgages/loans secured overseas
- rental income (if any) and tax position
- overall commitments and affordability
So it’s always best to disclose it up front.
Common pitfalls
- Assuming the overseas property will boost affordability: it may not, unless it produces provable net income.
- Currency risk: if income or liabilities are in a different currency, lenders may haircut it.
- Timing: overseas documentation can take longer (translations, title evidence, valuations).
What to do next
- Clarify what you’re trying to achieve: lower rate, higher borrowing, or simply smoother underwriting.
- Work out whether the UK mortgage works on UK security alone (often it will).
- If you genuinely need cross-border collateral, speak to a broker first – we can quickly tell you whether this is “private bank territory” and which route is most realistic before you spend time gathering overseas documents.
I believe you would benefit from speaking to one of our independent mortgage advisers. Please call on 023 8235 2300 and they will be able to look at your situation and take it from there.

