Skipton’s Track Record mortgage is designed for renters who want to buy but have struggled to build a deposit. It is built around a simple idea: if you can evidence a consistent history of paying rent, that should count for something when a lender assesses affordability and risk.
For the right first-time buyer, it can be a practical route into homeownership. For others, particularly those who can access a traditional deposit, it may be one option among several.
What the Track Record mortgage is trying to solve
A common frustration for renters is that they can comfortably afford monthly rent, but still cannot progress because saving a deposit is the sticking point. Track Record is aimed at borrowers in that position, provided their wider profile and credit conduct is strong.
It also reflects a shift in how some lenders are willing to think about affordability. The monthly payment still needs to be affordable on income, but the rent track record can support the case.
Key criteria points
The criteria is specific, and it is important to work from the lender’s current rules, not assumptions.
At a high level, borrowers typically need to meet requirements around:
- Being a first-time buyer, or not having owned a property within a set period
- Being aged 21 or over
- Having a good recent credit record
- Being able to evidence a sustained period of rental payments
- Being able to evidence consistent payment of household bills
- Meeting standard affordability checks once income, outgoings and commitments are assessed
- Staying within the maximum loan and loan-to-income limits
This is not a “rent equals mortgage” shortcut. The lender will still look closely at disposable income, existing credit, and the stability of employment.
How borrowing is calculated
The most important practical question is how much you can borrow and what purchase price that translates into.
Skipton’s approach uses your rent payments as a reference point, alongside normal affordability assessment. In simple terms, the mortgage payment needs to be credible relative to what you have already shown you can sustain via rent, while still fitting within wider affordability and income-based limits.
This is why the same rent figure can lead to different outcomes for different applicants. Other commitments and spending patterns still matter.
Product structure and what to watch
Track Record is typically offered on a five-year fixed basis. That can be helpful for certainty, but it also means you need to be comfortable with the commitment horizon.
There are three areas to be clear-eyed about.
Early repayment charges
Five-year products often come with early repayment charges. The exact structure varies, but the theme is the same: the product is designed for borrowers who expect to stay put for a period, rather than needing flexibility in the short term.
Negative equity risk
With little or no deposit, the risk of negative equity is higher than with a 90–95% mortgage. Even small price falls can matter in the early years, particularly if you need to move before you have paid down enough capital.
This does not mean the mortgage is “bad”. It means the time horizon and risk tolerance need to be realistic.
Your exit plan at the end of the fixed period
The question is not only whether the mortgage is right on day one, but what happens in five years.
If prices are flat and you have paid down only a modest amount of capital, you may still be in a high LTV band when the fix ends. That can affect the choice and pricing available at remortgage.
It is sensible to discuss what a plausible refinance route looks like, and what you can do during the fixed period to improve options, such as targeted overpayments where permitted.
Is it worth considering if family support is available?
Sometimes, yes, but it depends on the form of support.
If family support is a straightforward gifted deposit, that often opens up a wider range of mainstream products at lower LTVs.
If family support is only available through a structured family-backed scheme, Track Record can still be competitive in some cases, depending on overall cost, criteria, and how the family arrangement works.
It is not a headline-rate comparison. It is a full suitability and total-cost comparison.
Other practical points worth considering
There are a few additional angles that can make Track Record relevant in specific scenarios.
Some renters may want to buy the home they already rent, particularly where a landlord is considering selling. If the transaction can be agreed smoothly, it can reduce disruption and sometimes reduce friction on price and timing.
Also, some borrowers may have a deposit available but not enough to shift them meaningfully into a better pricing band. In certain cases, keeping funds back as a buffer and using a high LTV product can be part of a wider risk-managed plan, provided affordability is robust and the borrower understands the trade-offs.
Summary
Skipton’s Track Record mortgage is a useful option for renters who can evidence a strong payment history but have found deposit saving to be the main barrier. It is not for everyone, and it comes with higher risk than a conventional lower LTV mortgage, particularly around negative equity and flexibility.
Used in the right circumstances, it can be a pragmatic route into homeownership. The key is making sure the lender criteria fits, the payment is affordable, and the five-year horizon makes sense.
Speak to an adviser
If you are considering Track Record, or you want to compare it against family-supported routes and more traditional deposit-based options, it is worth getting advice early. The right lender choice and product structure can make a material difference, particularly at higher LTVs.
Get in touch with us on 023 8235 2300.



