Is equity release right for you?
There is no universal answer. The five branches below cover the situations where the answer is reasonably clear — they map to the most common circumstances we see in our reader inbox. None replace a regulated equity release adviser, but they will tell you whether it is even worth paying for one.
- 1 You are 70+, own your home outright, plan to stay there for life, and have already ruled out downsizing→ Good fit. With a shorter compounding horizon and a clear lifestyle case for staying, an ERC-standards drawdown plan with voluntary repayments is worth costing out. Get three quotes and use a CeRER-qualified adviser.
- 2 You are 65–70, want a one-off lump sum for home adaptations or to clear a small mortgage, and have ~20 years of life expectancy→ Possible fit, but compare with a Retirement Interest-Only (RIO) mortgage first. RIO keeps the capital flat by paying interest monthly — often cheaper over 20 years if you have income to service it.
- 3 You receive (or might in future receive) Pension Credit, Council Tax Reduction, Universal Credit or Help with Health Costs→ Get specialist advice before doing anything. A lump sum will almost certainly cost you some or all of these benefits. A drawdown reserve (untouched until needed) is treated more leniently. Check unclaimed Pension Credit first.
- 4 Your main reason is to give an adult child a property deposit or business stake→ Alternative would be better in most cases. Gifting through a remortgage, RIO, or downsizing transfers the same cash without compounding debt. Equity release for "living inheritance" only stacks up where the borrower also genuinely wants/needs cash for themselves.
- 5 You are under 65, in good health, and considering a lump sum for non-essential spending→ Do not proceed today. With 25+ years of compounding ahead, the debt is likely to overtake any house price growth and consume most of your equity. Revisit the decision in 5–10 years if circumstances change.
The 10 biggest pros of equity release
Every one of these advantages comes with an asterisk lower down in the cons table — but in fairness, they are genuine benefits that no alternative product fully replicates. Voluntary repayments and the ERC’s fifth product standard have improved the offer materially since 2022; the modern lifetime mortgage is a much better-designed product than its 1990s ancestors.
| # | Pro | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tax-free cash without moving home | Lump sums and drawdown payments are not taxed as income. You stay in the property you already know, with no removal costs and no upheaval. |
| 2 | No required monthly repayments | On a roll-up lifetime mortgage you do not have to pay anything each month. The debt is settled when the last borrower dies or moves into long-term care. |
| 3 | Lifetime tenure, guaranteed | All Equity Release Council plans guarantee the right to live in the property for life, or until you move into long-term care. The lender cannot force you out for missed payments. |
| 4 | No-negative-equity guarantee | On any ERC-standards plan, your estate will never owe more than the property sells for, even if the debt has overtaken the property value. |
| 5 | Fixed or capped rate for life | Lifetime mortgage rates are fixed at the outset (or capped on rare variable plans). The rate that applied to the money you drew in 2026 is the rate that money compounds at, forever. |
| 6 | Voluntary overpayments allowed | Since the ERC fifth product standard, all member plans must allow penalty-free voluntary partial repayments (typically up to 10% a year). Servicing the interest stops compounding in its tracks. |
| 7 | Portable if you move | ERC plans must let you move the loan to a new property (subject to lender criteria). New ERC Standards 2.0 rules also waive early repayment charges if you move permanently into long-term care. |
| 8 | Drawdown reserves protect Pension Credit (partially) | Unspent funds left in a drawdown facility are not counted as your capital. Only cash you actually withdraw is treated as savings for the means-test — useful planning lever. |
| 9 | Lifetime gift for family — while you are alive | Many borrowers use the cash for "living inheritance" — helping children onto the property ladder or with grandchildren's education. Done well, this can sit within IHT gift rules. |
| 10 | Mandatory independent legal advice | Every ERC plan requires you to take face-to-face independent legal advice from a solicitor of your choice. This is a real consumer protection — your solicitor signs to confirm you understand the deal. |
The 10 biggest cons of equity release
The cons are where most reader regret lives. They are also where the salesperson’s incentive is most misaligned with yours: every con on this list is a feature, not a bug, for a provider being paid by loan volume. Take them seriously even when an adviser is dismissive.
| # | Con | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Compound interest is brutal over 20+ years | At a typical 2026 rate of 6.5%, debt roughly doubles every 11 years (the Rule of 72: 72 / 6.5 ≈ 11.1). £80,000 released today becomes ~£281,892 after 20 years and ~£386,216 after 25 years. |
| 2 | It can wipe out most or all of the inheritance | The debt is repaid out of the home sale before anything passes to beneficiaries. If house prices rise slower than the interest rate compounds, the residual equity shrinks every year. |
| 3 | Means-tested benefits can be lost | Cash sitting in your account counts as capital for Pension Credit, Council Tax Reduction, Universal Credit and Help with Health Costs. Pension Credit tapers by £1/week for every £500 of capital above £10,000. |
| 4 | Early repayment charges can be severe | Typical fixed-percentage schedules charge 10% in year 1, tapering to 0% by year 8–15. Gilt-linked ERCs can be even higher if gilt yields fall. Repaying early because you want to move to a non-eligible property can cost £8,000+ on a £80k loan. |
| 5 | Set-up costs add £2,000–£3,500 to the deal | Adviser fee (typically £1,500–£2,000), solicitor fee (£600–£1,000), valuation (£300–£500) and lender application fees. Most can be added to the loan, where they then compound. |
| 6 | House price growth has to outrun the interest rate | If your home grows at 2% a year and the loan compounds at 6.5%, the gap between debt and house value widens by 4.5 percentage points every year. The cushion under the no-negative-equity guarantee thins. |
| 7 | Reduces flexibility for future moves | You can port to a new property only if the new home meets the lender's criteria (type, value, location). Sheltered housing, ex-council flats with short leases and some park homes are commonly ineligible. |
| 8 | Family conversations are easy to avoid — and often regretted | Industry surveys put the share of borrowers who do not tell their family at ~14%. Beneficiaries finding out post-death is one of the most common sources of complaint. |
| 9 | Mental capacity must be present at application | You must have mental capacity at the moment you apply. An attorney under an LPA cannot apply for equity release on your behalf unless you have lost capacity and a separate capacity assessment confirms it — a high bar. |
| 10 | It is rarely the cheapest answer | Downsizing, a RIO mortgage, claiming unclaimed Pension Credit (~880,000 households still do not claim) or a family loan all release cash at lower long-run cost. Equity release wins on lifestyle, rarely on price. |
Lump sum vs drawdown vs downsize — the maths on £80,000
The comparator below uses the average May 2026 lifetime-mortgage rate of around 6.5% and the ONS long-run UK house price growth of about 2% real. Change the inputs to match your own situation. "Drawdown ER" assumes half the loan is taken now and the rest is drawn down evenly over years 1–10 (typical of how a drawdown reserve facility is used). "Downsize" assumes you sell the existing home, buy a smaller one and bank the difference, with £5,000 of moving costs.
May 2026 market range roughly 6.0–7.5%. Default 6.5% is a typical fixed lifetime rate.
ONS long-run UK average is ~2% real / ~5% nominal. Use 2% for a sober scenario.
| Route | Debt after 20 yrs | Home value | Residual equity / wealth |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lump-sum lifetime mortgage | £281,892 | £520,082 | £238,190 |
| Drawdown ER (50% now + 10×5% over yrs 1–10) | £242,269 | £520,082 | £277,813 |
| Downsize (sell, buy smaller, bank difference) | £0 | £393,776 | £463,776 |
At 6.5% for 20 years, a £80,000 lump-sum lifetime mortgage becomes £281,892. Against a £350,000 home growing at 2.0%, that leaves £238,190 in your estate. Downsizing instead leaves you with £463,776 of combined housing wealth and cash — £225,586 more.
The drawdown route lands in the middle: £277,813 of residual equity because most of the borrowing had less time to compound. Voluntary partial repayments (allowed under the ERC fifth standard) can close most of the gap with downsizing — at the cost of having to find the monthly payment from somewhere.
Approximate. Lump-sum debt is principal × (1 + rate)years. Drawdown is modelled as 50% taken at outset compounding for the full period, plus 10 equal annual chunks each compounding from the year drawn. Downsize assumes £5,000 moving costs and a smaller home that tracks the same growth rate. No-negative-equity guarantee caps the debt at the home value on sale, but does not return any cash if the debt exceeds the home value.
Three real scenarios
Situation: Wants to spend more in early retirement, has no children, and intends to stay in her current home for life. The house is too big but she likes the garden, neighbours and GP surgery.
Margaret has the textbook profile for equity release. She is 72 (a shorter compounding horizon than someone at 65), genuinely committed to staying put, has no beneficiaries with a strong inheritance interest, and wants the cash for higher current spending. She takes a £60,000 drawdown reserve at 6.4%, drawing £20,000 upfront and ~£4,000/year for 10 years thereafter.
- Debt at age 92 (20 years on): ~£135,000 (drawdown effect halves it)
- Estimated home value at 2% growth: ~£624,000
- Residual equity: ~£489,000 — passes via her will to her named charities
- Means-tested benefits: not affected; the undrawn reserve does not count as her capital
For Margaret the trade is genuinely reasonable: she gets the lifestyle she wants in her 70s, the compounding has only ~20 years to run, and the home still passes a substantial residual. She uses an Equity Release Council-member plan with the no-negative-equity guarantee and takes voluntary partial repayments of £200/month when she can, which her plan must allow under the ERC fifth product standard.
Situation: Want £80,000 to renovate the kitchen and bathroom and clear a £25k credit card. Their adviser has not yet shown them the downsizing maths.
Ron and Pat are in the high-risk zone: under 70, in good health, modest pot, strong family inheritance intent. A £80,000 lump sum at 6.5% becomes ~£281,000 by the time they are both 86. If their £300k home grows at 2% it will be worth ~£446,000 by then, leaving about £165,000 for their two children — versus the ~£300k their kids assume they will inherit today.
- Alternative 1 — Downsize: a £220k home plus £75k cash, no debt; after 20 years their children inherit ~£402,000 combined (~£237k more)
- Alternative 2 — RIO mortgage: a £80k retirement interest-only, paying ~£430/month interest (£5,160/year). Capital stays at £80k forever; estate value preserved
- Alternative 3 — Defer the kitchen: use ~£25k of savings (or 0% credit card) to clear the card now; renovate in 3–5 years from a smaller equity release at age 69–71
Their adviser should have presented these. Under FCA MCOB 8 rules an equity release adviser must consider alternatives — but in practice the conversation is often perfunctory. Ron and Pat should ask in writing why the RIO option was rejected and require a second opinion before signing.
Situation: Vera's daughter Anna holds a registered LPA for Property and Financial Affairs. The family hopes to release £100k for live-in care so Vera can stay in her own home.
This is the situation most families assume an LPA solves automatically. It does not. An attorney cannot apply for equity release on behalf of a living person who still has capacity (the lender will refuse). For someone who has lost capacity, an attorney can in principle apply in best interests — but the application is extensively gated:
- The LPA must be a Property and Financial Affairs LPA (not Health and Welfare), and must be registered with the Office of the Public Guardian.
- A fresh mental capacity assessment by a registered healthcare professional is usually required by the lender, confirming Vera now lacks capacity for this specific financial decision.
- Many lenders also require Court of Protection involvement when the transaction is large or contested by other family members.
- The attorney must act in the person’s best interests under the Mental Capacity Act 2005, with the lifetime mortgage providing measurable benefit to Vera (care funding, yes; gifting to grandchildren, no).
Anna’s practical route is: speak to a solicitor specialising in mental capacity work before contacting a lender; commission the capacity assessment; gather costed care-fee projections to demonstrate "best interests"; expect a 3–6 month timeline. Some families find a Deferred Payment Agreement with the local authority simpler — see our equity release for care funding guide.
Inheritance impact — the biggest unspoken cost
Every pound of lifetime-mortgage debt is repaid from the sale of the home before anything passes to your beneficiaries. At a 6.5% compounding rate, a £80,000 lump sum becomes ~£281,000 after 20 years. Unless your home grows at a similar pace (most do not — the UK long-run real growth rate is ~2%), the residual equity for your estate falls every year.
Industry research suggests around 14% of borrowers do not tell their family about the plan at all. Beneficiaries discovering an equity release loan only at probate is a common source of complaint to the Financial Ombudsman Service — even when the borrower acted within their rights. A 20-minute family conversation at the application stage prevents most of this. The Equity Release Council’s consumer guides explicitly encourage involving beneficiaries; some advisers will invite them to the suitability meeting.
Inheritance tax sometimes works in equity release’s favour: the debt is a deduction from the gross estate, potentially reducing the IHT bill if the estate is above £325k (£500k with the residence nil-rate band). But for the great majority of estates that fall under the threshold anyway, that benefit is theoretical. See our equity release explained guide for the full IHT treatment.
Means-tested benefits — Pension Credit, Council Tax Reduction and more
Cash received from equity release counts in full as capital for the means-test on Pension Credit, Council Tax Reduction, Universal Credit, Housing Benefit and Help with Health Costs. The rules:
- Pension Credit (Guarantee Credit): capital up to £10,000 is ignored; above that, every £500 reduces your weekly entitlement by £1 (i.e. £52/year for every £500). Capital of £30,000 cuts weekly entitlement by £40 (~£2,080/year).
- Council Tax Reduction: set locally; most councils cap eligibility at £16,000 of capital, with some bands above £6,000. Above £16,000 most pensioners lose all CTR.
- Pension Credit Savings Credit: exists for those who reached State Pension age before 6 April 2016 — also tapered by capital.
- Universal Credit: capital over £16,000 disqualifies completely; £6,000 to £16,000 reduces it by £4.35/month per £250.
The key planning lever: money sitting in a drawdown reserve facility that you have agreed but not yet withdrawn does not count as your capital. Only money you have actually drawn does. This makes drawdown lifetime mortgages much more benefit-compatible than single lump sums — but spend the drawn cash too slowly and you still end up over the thresholds. Spending or gifting cash specifically to preserve benefits is "deprivation of assets" and the DWP can treat the money as if you still had it. See our equity release and benefits guide for the full table.
Mental capacity, LPAs and the application gate
Equity release is a major financial decision and UK law requires you to have full mental capacity at the moment you apply. Your independent solicitor signs to confirm this in the mandatory face-to-face legal advice meeting; lenders rely on that confirmation. The practical implications:
- If you currently have capacity, you cannot get an attorney to apply on your behalf to "make life easier". The application must be yours.
- If you have already lost capacity, an attorney acting under a registered Lasting Power of Attorney for Property and Financial Affairs can apply in your best interests — but most lenders require a fresh capacity assessment from a registered healthcare professional, and for larger or contested loans the Court of Protection may need to authorise.
- A Health and Welfare LPA does not cover financial transactions. You need the Property and Financial Affairs LPA.
- The Equity Release Council strongly recommends setting up an LPA before taking out a lifetime mortgage, especially a drawdown plan where future withdrawals may be needed if you later lose capacity. Without an LPA, future drawdowns can be blocked entirely.
Register an LPA early — the Office of the Public Guardian currently quotes 16–20 weeks to process applications, so it is not something to leave until you need it. There is one LPA per person; couples need two.
Alternatives to check first
- Claim what you are owed. An estimated 880,000 households (~£2.2bn/year) do not claim Pension Credit they are entitled to. Average award is ~£75/week (~£3,900/year) and is a passport to free TV licence (75+), Cold Weather Payments, Warm Home Discount, dental, opticals and Council Tax Reduction. Often replaces the income reason for equity release entirely.
- Downsize. Selling a £350k home and buying a £270k one releases ~£75k with no compounding debt. Emotional cost is real; financial cost is lower over any 20-year horizon.
- Retirement Interest-Only (RIO) mortgage. You pay interest monthly; the capital never compounds. Costs you ~£430/month on £80k at 6.5% but preserves the estate. You need provable income to qualify; most lenders accept State Pension plus modest private pension.
- Standard later-life remortgage. If you still have earned income, a normal capital-and-interest mortgage with a long term may be available — cheaper than ER if you can service the payments.
- Family loan or "deferred gift" agreement. Beneficiaries lending you cash now in exchange for an agreed share of the estate later. Always document professionally to avoid family disputes.
- Local authority home improvement loans. Disabled Facilities Grants (up to £30k in England) for adaptations; Home Improvement Agency Handyperson services; means-tested local repair grants.
- Deferred Payment Agreement (care funding only). If equity release is for care fees, ask the local authority about a DPA before committing — typically much cheaper than ER because the council’s rate is set to cost-of-funds plus a small margin.
Full comparison: equity release alternatives.
What the Equity Release Council actually guarantees
“Plans that meet the Council’s standards come with five product safeguards: no negative equity guarantee; fixed or capped rates for life; the right to port; the right to make overpayments; and secure tenure for life. From 6 May 2025, member lenders will also waive early repayment charges if a borrower moves permanently into long-term care.”
Source: Equity Release Council — Professional Standards & Guarantees, and ERC Standards 2.0 announcement, 2025.
MoneyHelper’s consumer overview is also worth reading verbatim before any meeting with an adviser: “With a lifetime mortgage, you run the risk of owing far more than you borrowed when your home is sold — up to the total value of the property — because a lifetime mortgage charges compound interest. If you don’t pay off the interest at regular intervals, the entire sum compounds, so at around 5% interest, the amount you owe would double around every 15 years.” Source: MoneyHelper — What is equity release?
Frequently asked questions
- Is equity release a good idea in 2026?
- Sometimes — but rarely as a first choice. At the May 2026 average lifetime-mortgage rate of around 6.5%, a £80,000 loan roughly doubles every 11 years and reaches ~£281,000 after 20 years. That can be the right trade for households who are asset-rich, cash-poor, want to stay in their home and have already ruled out downsizing, RIO mortgages, claiming unclaimed Pension Credit and family loans. It is rarely the right answer for someone whose main motive is helping an adult child onto the property ladder, or for someone in good health under 65 with decades of compounding ahead. Always take an Equity Release Council plan with the no-negative-equity guarantee, and use an FCA-regulated adviser holding CeRER or CER.
- What are the disadvantages of equity release?
- The three big ones: (1) compound interest — at 6.5% the debt doubles every 11 years, so a £60,000 loan at 65 can be £240,000 at 89; (2) means-tested benefits — Pension Credit tapers above £10,000 of capital and Council Tax Reduction usually disappears entirely above £16,000; (3) inheritance — the loan is repaid from the sale of the home before anything goes to beneficiaries, often leaving very little behind. Other significant downsides: early repayment charges (typically 10% in year 1, tapering over 8–15 years), set-up costs of £2,000–£3,500, restrictions on which future homes you can port to, and the requirement that you have full mental capacity at the application — an LPA attorney cannot apply on your behalf.
- How much equity will I have left after 20 years?
- It depends on the loan size, the interest rate, the type of plan (lump sum vs drawdown) and house price growth. A worked example: £80,000 lump sum at 6.5% compounds to about £281,000 in 20 years. A £350,000 home growing at 2% a year is worth about £520,000. Residual equity for your estate is roughly £520,000 − £281,000 = £239,000 — but if your home grew at only 1% a year (£427,000) the residual is £146,000, and if it kept pace with the loan at 6.5% (£1.23m theoretical, which is wildly optimistic) you keep most of it. The drawdown version, where you take half now and the rest in chunks, ends up with materially less debt because most of the borrowing has had less time to compound.
- Will equity release affect my Pension Credit?
- Almost certainly, unless you spend the cash quickly on goods (not gifted or moved to inaccessible savings — that is "deprivation of assets" and the DWP can reverse it). Capital between £10,000 and the upper limit reduces Pension Credit Guarantee Credit by £1/week for every £500 of savings above £10,000. Council Tax Reduction in most local authorities cuts off entirely above £16,000 of capital. There is one important wrinkle: money still sitting in a drawdown reserve facility (i.e. agreed but not yet taken) does not count as your capital — only money you have actually withdrawn does. That makes drawdown lifetime mortgages much more benefit-friendly than single lump sums.
- Should I do equity release or downsize?
- Downsize first, almost always. Selling a £350,000 home and moving to a £270,000 one releases £75,000 net of typical £5,000 moving costs — similar to releasing £80,000 of equity. The crucial difference: downsizing creates zero compounding debt. After 20 years, the downsize household still owns a home (now worth about £400,000 at 2% growth) plus had the cash to spend. The equity release household owns a home (now worth £520,000) minus a £281,000 debt — about £240,000 of residual equity, roughly £160,000 less than the downsize route. Downsizing is right for households willing to move; equity release is right when staying put has a meaningful, named value (close to family, accessible bungalow, established medical care, garden you cannot replace).
- What are the early repayment charges on equity release?
- Two main types. Fixed-percentage ERCs run on a set schedule — typically 10% in year 1, tapering by 1 percentage point a year to 0% by year 10 or 15 (some plans 8 years). Aviva and Pure publish straightforward fixed schedules. Gilt-linked ERCs are calculated against the change in a specified UK gilt yield since drawdown — they can be zero if gilt yields rise, but can run to 25% if gilt yields fall sharply, which is the bigger risk in the current cycle. Under ERC Standards 2.0 (from 6 May 2025) members must waive ERCs entirely when you permanently move into long-term care. Voluntary partial repayments up to ~10% a year are ERC-free on all ERC-standards plans.
- Is equity release safe?
- For plans that meet the Equity Release Council's Standards 2.0 (most of the active UK market), the core consumer protections are: no-negative-equity guarantee, right to remain in the home for life, fixed or capped interest rate, right to make voluntary partial repayments, right to port to a new eligible property, and mandatory independent legal advice. Advice itself is FCA-regulated — your adviser must hold CeMAP + CeRER (or CER) and follow MCOB Chapter 8. The two areas that are not protected by the ERC standards: the level of the interest rate itself (it can be high), and the impact on your means-tested benefits and inheritance (those are economic consequences, not product defects). Safe does not mean automatically suitable.
- Can I use a Power of Attorney to take out equity release?
- Only in narrow circumstances. To set up a lifetime mortgage you must have mental capacity at the moment of application — capacity is assessed and confirmed by the solicitor giving you independent legal advice. If you currently have capacity, you cannot get an attorney to apply on your behalf "to make it easier"; lenders will not accept the application. If you have already lost capacity, an attorney acting under a registered Lasting Power of Attorney for Property and Financial Affairs can apply for equity release in your best interests, but most lenders will require a fresh mental capacity assessment from a registered healthcare professional, and the Court of Protection may need to be involved for unusual cases.
- What are the alternatives to equity release?
- In rough order of preference: (1) Check unclaimed benefits — ~£2.2bn of Pension Credit goes unclaimed each year, worth on average ~£3,900/year per household; (2) Downsize — releases similar cash with zero compounding debt; (3) Retirement Interest-Only (RIO) mortgage — you pay interest monthly so the capital never compounds, and the loan is repaid on death or sale; (4) Standard remortgage if you still have employment income; (5) Family loan or "soft" gift back from beneficiaries; (6) Sell to a family member and rent back informally; (7) Local authority home improvement loans for specific repairs/adaptations. Equity release lands at the bottom of this list because it converts a finite asset (your home) into compounding debt.
- Who regulates equity release advisers in the UK?
- The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). Equity release advice is a regulated mortgage activity governed by the FCA Handbook's Mortgages and Home Finance: Conduct of Business sourcebook (MCOB), specifically chapter 8 ("Equity release: advising and selling standards"). An adviser must hold a Level 3 mortgage qualification (CeMAP or equivalent) plus a specialist equity release qualification — CeRER from the London Institute of Banking & Finance or CER from the Chartered Insurance Institute. Most reputable advisers are also members of the Equity Release Council, which adds further conduct standards on top of the FCA rules. You can verify any adviser on the FCA Register at register.fca.org.uk before signing anything.
Sources
Every figure on this page traces back to a primary or near-primary UK source:
- Equity Release Council — Professional Standards & Guarantees. Source of the five product safeguards (no-negative-equity guarantee, fixed/capped rates, right to port, right to make overpayments, secure tenure for life) and the requirement for mandatory face-to-face independent legal advice.
- Equity Release Council — Standards 2.0 launch. Source of the new protection waiving early repayment charges when a borrower moves permanently into long-term care, in force from 6 May 2025.
- The Intermediary — Equity release lending drops 9% in Q1 (ERC Q1 2026 market data). Source of the £574m total Q1 2026 lending figure, 4,868 new plans, 12,958 total customers, and £121,196 average new lump sum size.
- MoneyHelper — What is equity release?. Government-backed consumer guide; source of the pros/cons editorial standard and the compound interest caution ("at around 5%, the debt doubles roughly every 15 years").
- FCA — Training & Competence (qualification requirements) and FCA MCOB 8: Equity release advising and selling standards. Source of the rule that equity release is FCA-regulated and an adviser must hold a Level 3 mortgage qualification (CeMAP or equivalent) plus the specialist CeRER or CER.
- London Institute of Banking & Finance — CeRER qualification. The Level 3 specialist equity release qualification recognised in the FCA Handbook.
- Age UK — Factsheet 65: Equity release (February 2026). Source of the means-test impact summary on Pension Credit and Council Tax Reduction, and the consumer-facing risk language used in our cons table.
- GOV.UK — Pension Credit eligibility. Source of the £10,000 capital threshold and the £1/week-per-£500 tapering rule used in our worked examples.
- Equity Release Council — What is a Lasting Power of Attorney?. Source of the recommendation to register an LPA for Property and Financial Affairs alongside any drawdown plan, and the rule that an attorney cannot apply for equity release on behalf of someone who still has capacity.
- Equity Release Council — Early repayment charges explained. Source of the fixed-percentage vs gilt-linked ERC distinction and the typical "10% in year 1, tapering" schedule referenced in our cons table.
- Royal London — Is equity release a good idea?. Independent UK life office’s consumer guide; used as cross-check on the compound-interest worked examples and inheritance impact framing.
- MoneySavingExpert — Equity release explained. Independent consumer site; used as cross-check on the alternatives ranking and the "alternatives must be considered" framing under FCA MCOB 8.
- Equity Release Council — Members back the fifth product standard. Source for the right to make voluntary partial repayments without early repayment charges (the fifth ERC product standard).