You may be able to buy your parents’ house, but if they are going to carry on living there, you usually will not be able to do it with a standard buy-to-let mortgage.
The main issue is that the property stops looking like a normal investment purchase and starts looking more like a family housing arrangement. From a lender’s point of view, that changes both the risk and the type of mortgage that may be suitable.
Why a Standard Buy-to-Let Mortgage May not Work
If you buy a property and rent it to a family member, such as your parents, it will usually be treated as a regulated buy-to-let mortgage rather than a standard buy-to-let.
That matters because not all lenders offer regulated buy-to-let at all, and those that do tend to apply tighter criteria. They know that where a property is being let to family, the arrangement may not work like a straightforward commercial tenancy. For example, the rent may be below market level, or you may be less likely to take action if payments are missed.
So while buying a house with a buy-to-let mortgage and renting to family can be possible, it is more restricted than a normal buy-to-let case.
Rent and Affordability Do Not Work in the Same Way
With a standard buy-to-let mortgage, lenders usually focus heavily on whether the expected rent covers the mortgage by the required margin.
With a regulated buy-to-let, they are often more cautious. If your parents will not be paying full market rent, or the arrangement is informal, the lender may place much more weight on your own income and outgoings instead. That can reduce how much you are able to borrow.
There is another point to bear in mind too. Some lenders want buy-to-let applicants to already own their own home. So if you do not currently own a property yourself, or you are still living with your parents, that can narrow the options further.
Buying Below Market Value Can Add Another Layer
If you are buying your parents’ home at less than full market value, this may be treated as a concessionary family purchase.
Some lenders are comfortable with that, but others are not. Where your parents are effectively gifting equity, the lender will usually want the arrangement properly documented and may also want confirmation that they have taken independent legal advice.
Again, it does not automatically stop the case, but it can reduce lender choice.
What Are the Alternatives?
If your parents are going to remain in the property, the most suitable route is often either a regulated buy-to-let mortgage with a lender that accepts family lets, or a mortgage assessed more on your personal affordability than on the rent alone.
The right solution will usually depend on three things: whether your parents are staying in the property, whether they will pay full market rent, and whether you are buying at full value or at a discount.
The Bottom Line
So, can you get a buy-to-let mortgage for parents? Sometimes, yes — but usually not on standard buy-to-let terms.
Once parents are involved, the case often moves into regulated buy-to-let territory, and that means tighter criteria around rent, affordability and the overall structure of the purchase.
This is one of those areas where lender rules vary quite a bit, so getting advice early can make a real difference. A broker can help you work out whether a regulated buy-to-let, a concessionary purchase, or another mortgage route is the best fit for your circumstances
Contact us on 023 8235 2300 to talk to a mortgage expert about your options.


