Irish central bank eases strict mortgage-lending limits

Reuters

Published Oct 19, 2022 10:52

Updated Oct 19, 2022 12:30

By Conor Humphries

DUBLIN (Reuters) -Ireland's central bank is to ease mortgage-lending limits to allow first-time property buyers to borrow up to four times their income, in a move it said could help meet growing building costs but could also modestly push up prices.

The central bank introduced limits in 2015 capping how much banks can lend for the purchase of a home relative to its value and the borrower's income in a bid to prevent a repeat of excessive lending that devastated the economy over a decade ago.

Central Bank Governor Gabriel Makhlouf said an increase in financial stability in Ireland since then had given the bank the space for a "targeted recalibration".

Lenders can now offer loans only up to 3.5 times the income of first-time buyers. That is set to rise to four times from January, the bank said. The 3.5 times limit will remain for other buyers in what are among the strictest such limits in the European Union.

The bank also raised the loan-to-value limit for those buying for the second time to 90% from 80%, putting them in line with current limits for first-time buyers.

Makhlouf told journalists the changes would make it a little bit easier for first-time buyers to buy a property.

He said, however, that the changes were designed to manage financial stability and not to increase supply.

Rising interest rates, which increase the cost of mortgages, were not a factor, he said, adding that the changes could lead to a "modest increase" in house prices.