Barclays further enhances mortgage policies

Barclays has made several enhancements to its mortgage policies, enabling customers to borrow more when buying a home. The lender has made three key changes covering self-employed, interest-only and BTL customers

Related topics:  Criteria,  Self-employed lending
Editor | Modern Lender
6th October 2025
Criteria 2

Barclays has made several enhancements to its mortgage policies, enabling customers to borrow more when buying a home. The lender has made three key changes covering self-employed, interest-only and BTL customers:

Improvements for self-employed homebuyers

Barclays will now accept 100% of net profits (Profit After Tax/PAT) in its affordability assessments and has also reduced the minimum loan threshold for PAT acceptance, benefitting self-employed homebuyers who will now be able to borrow more and against a wider range of homes.

Increased flexibility for interest-only borrowing

For interest-only mortgage applications where there is at least £500k in equity, Barclays has increased the maximum loan to value (LTV) to 75% (where the repayment vehicle is sale of property). 

Higher maximum loans for buy to let (BTL)

For new build properties, Barclays has raised maximum loan size from £500k to £550k at 60-75% LTV. For flats, the lender has increased from £500k to £550k at 70-75% LTV.

These enhancements are the latest in a series of changes Barclays has made to improve affordability for homebuyers. Earlier this year, Barclays announced changes to its affordability calculations that allowed a family to potentially borrow up to £30,750 more (subject to application, financial circumstances and borrowing history). It also increased its maximum loan amounts for high LTV purchases across all of its mortgages, to £640,000 for houses and £310,000 for flats, enabling more buyers to access homes in higher price brackets with just a 10% deposit.

It has also introduced several new propositions supporting home ownership, including Mortgage Boost - which allows family or friends to ‘boost’ the amount that can be borrowed towards a home without having to lend or gift money directly - and a zero deposit mortgage for Right to Buy applicants.

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