First Homes Scheme Guide 2026 — 25 Questions Answered on Eligibility, Resale and Costs

Last reviewed: May 2026 ·

The First Homes Scheme sounds straightforward — a 30% discount on a new-build home.

But the eligibility rules, resale restrictions, remortgaging complications, and deposit calculations raise dozens of questions that official guidance does not answer .

Here are the 25 questions our team answered for you.

The First Homes Scheme gives first-time buyers in England a minimum 30% discount off the full market price of a new-build property.

You buy 100% of the home from day one. The discount is written permanently into the title deed — meaning when you sell, the same percentage discount must be passed on to the next eligible buyer.

Key factDetail
Minimum discount30% off full market value
Maximum discount50% off full market value
Ownership from day one100% — no rent, no housing association
Income cap EnglandUnder £80,000 gross household income
Income cap LondonUnder £90,000 gross household income
Price cap England£250,000 after discount
Price cap London£420,000 after discount
Property typeNew-build only
Available inEngland only
Resale restrictionSame % discount passed to next eligible FTB forever

Read our complete guide: First Homes Scheme UK — complete 2026 guide — everything about how the scheme works, how to apply, and what the discount means in practice.

Source: GOV.UK — First Homes Scheme

First Homes Scheme guide 2026 eligibility resale and costs explained

Yes — without exception. If you are buying jointly, every person named on the title deeds must be a first-time buyer.

If one person has previously owned a residential property anywhere in the world — including properties inherited or received as a gift — the entire application is disqualified from First Homes eligibility.

This is one of the most common reasons buyers are turned away from the scheme.

A couple where one partner previously owned a flat, even briefly, cannot use the First Homes Scheme together regardless of how long ago the previous ownership was.


This depends entirely on whether your name was on the title deeds of that property.

If you were only on the mortgage — not the title deeds — you are still legally a first-time buyer for the purposes of the First Homes Scheme.

SDLT and scheme eligibility are both assessed based on who is named on the title deeds, not on the mortgage.

If your name was on the title deeds, even as a joint owner with your ex-partner, you are no longer a first-time buyer and cannot use the First Homes Scheme.

The Shared Ownership scheme may still be available to you in this situation.


Yes. If you have ever owned a residential property — including through inheritance — you no longer meet the first-time buyer definition under Schedule 6ZA of the Finance Act 2003, which the First Homes Scheme uses.

This applies even if you never lived in the inherited property, never benefited financially from it, and sold your share immediately.

The act of having owned it is what counts — not how long you owned it or why.

This is a genuinely harsh rule that catches many buyers by surprise.

If this applies to you, speak to a conveyancing solicitor before assuming you are disqualified — there are occasional nuances depending on the exact circumstances of the inheritance.

Source: Malvern Hills District Council — Finance Act 2003 Schedule 6ZA reference


Yes — under a specific mortgage structure called Joint Borrower Sole Proprietor (JBSP).

Under this arrangement, a parent is named on the mortgage to boost affordability — but is not named on the title deeds.

Because First Homes eligibility is assessed based on the title deeds, not the mortgage, the parent’s prior property ownership does not disqualify you.

This must be arranged specifically as a JBSP mortgage and agreed with both your lender and conveyancing solicitor from the outset.

Not all lenders offer this product — your mortgage broker will need to confirm availability before you reserve the property.


The income cap of £80,000 is a strict threshold — there is no grace period or rounding. If your combined household income from the previous tax year exceeds £80,000, you do not qualify.

However, two things are worth checking before giving up.

First, certain income types are excluded from the cap calculation — including child benefit, tax credits, and some one-off bonuses.

It is worth confirming exactly which income is counted with a mortgage adviser or the developer’s sales team.

Second, some local authorities set a lower local income cap than the national £80,000 figure. Importantly, no council can set a cap higher than £80,000 — the national cap is the maximum.

So if you are just below £80,000, you should always check whether your local council has applied a stricter local cap that could still exclude you.

Source: GOV.UK — First Homes Scheme eligibility

Source: DLUHC — First Homes Local Authority Guidance Version 2, February 2024


Last year’s income — specifically the previous tax year immediately preceding the year of purchase.

This is important for buyers whose income has changed significantly.

If you earned £95,000 last year but took a pay cut and now earn £72,000, you do not qualify based on last year’s income figure.

Conversely, if you earned £75,000 last year but recently received a promotion that takes you to £90,000, you would currently qualify based on last year’s figure.

Always confirm which tax year applies with the developer and your solicitor before making a reservation.

Source: Malvern Hills District Council — First Homes eligibility


You get priority — but it is not automatic nationwide and does not guarantee you a property.

Key workers including NHS staff, teachers, police officers, firefighters, and armed forces personnel receive a priority window — typically the first three months after a First Homes property is listed.

During that period, only key workers and buyers with a qualifying local connection can submit applications.

After the three-month window closes, any eligible first-time buyer can apply. So key worker status gives you first pick — not guaranteed access.

The definition of key worker and the length of the priority period varies by local authority. Some councils define it broadly.

Others have a very specific list of qualifying occupations.

Check your local council’s published First Homes criteria before assuming your occupation qualifies.


No. Members of the armed forces, veterans who left within the last five years, and widows or widowers of armed forces personnel are specifically exempt from both the key worker priority criteria and the local connection criteria.

This means an armed forces buyer can apply for any First Homes property in England — regardless of where the property is located and regardless of whether they have ever lived or worked in that area.

You must still meet all other eligibility requirements — income cap, first-time buyer status, mortgage requirement, and property price cap.


Yes — being self-employed does not disqualify you.

However, lenders assess self-employed mortgage applications differently, which can affect your ability to borrow enough to purchase a First Homes property.

Most lenders require a minimum of two years of self-employed accounts or tax returns.

They will typically use the average of your last two years’ net profit — or sometimes the lower of the two years — as your income for affordability purposes.

This can mean your borrowing capacity is lower than an equivalently-earning employed buyer.

A whole-of-market mortgage broker with experience in self-employed applications is strongly recommended before you reserve a First Homes property.


There is no maximum age limit. You can be 45, 55, or 65 and still apply — provided you meet all other eligibility criteria.

The practical limit is your mortgage term.

Most lenders require the mortgage to be repaid by age 70 or 75.

If you are older, the maximum mortgage term available to you will be shorter — which means higher monthly repayments and potentially lower borrowing capacity.

There is no minimum age limit beyond being 18 or over to enter a legal contract.



You need a minimum deposit of 5% of the discounted purchase price — not 5% of the full market value.

This is one of the most financially significant advantages of the scheme.

Because the purchase price is reduced by 30–50%, the deposit required is proportionally lower.

Full market valueDiscountYour purchase price5% deposit needed
£300,00030%£210,000£10,500
£350,00030%£245,000£12,250
£400,00030%£280,000£14,000
£400,00040%£240,000£12,000
£500,00030%£350,000£17,500

A larger deposit of 10% or more will give you access to better mortgage rates and lower monthly repayments — but 5% is the legally required minimum.


Yes — and this is one of the most powerful combinations available to first-time buyers in England.

A Lifetime ISA gives you a 25% government bonus on savings of up to £4,000 per year — meaning up to £1,000 free money added to your savings annually.

This can be used directly towards the deposit on a First Homes property, provided the discounted purchase price does not exceed £450,000.

The LISA bonus is paid after the property purchase completes. You must have held the LISA for at least 12 months before using it.

If you withdraw the LISA savings for any other purpose, a 25% withdrawal penalty applies — which effectively takes back the bonus and a portion of your own savings.


No. A mortgage is a legal requirement of the First Homes Scheme — you cannot purchase with cash even if you have sufficient funds available.

The mortgage must cover a minimum of 50% of the discounted purchase price.

This rule exists to ensure the scheme genuinely helps buyers who need financial support to access homeownership — not buyers who are simply seeking a discount on a property they could afford outright.

If you follow Islamic finance principles and require a Sharia-compliant product, a home purchase plan is accepted in place of a conventional mortgage — subject to the same 50% minimum rule.


Not all lenders have confirmed their position on First Homes properties — and this is a critically important check to make before you reserve.

Lenders who have publicly confirmed they will lend against First Homes properties include major high street banks and building societies.

However, the list of participating lenders changes as the scheme matures.

Some lenders have specific requirements around the discount percentage or require additional legal undertakings.

Always confirm with a whole-of-market mortgage broker — before paying any reservation fee — that at least two lenders will offer you a mortgage on the specific First Homes property you are considering.

The developer’s in-house mortgage adviser may not have access to the full market and may not tell you if options are limited.


Yes — but with important caveats that every First Homes buyer must understand before purchasing.

You can remortgage to a new deal with the same or a different lender when your fixed rate expires.

However, because the property carries a resale covenant restricting who can buy it and at what price, some lenders are cautious about lending against First Homes properties.

The market value your lender will use for remortgaging purposes is the discounted value — not the full open market value. This means your loan-to-value ratio is calculated on the lower discounted price.

For most remortgages this is straightforward, but it limits how much equity you can release compared to an equivalent property without a covenant.

As the First Homes Scheme matures and more properties reach remortgage stage, lender appetite is expected to grow.

Always use a whole-of-market broker when remortgaging a First Homes property to access all available options.



When you bought your First Homes property, you paid a discounted price.

That discount — whether 30%, 40%, or 50% — is written permanently into the title deed of the property as a legal covenant.

When you sell, you must apply the same percentage discount to whatever the full market value is at that point in time.

You cannot sell at full market value. Ever.

Here is a simple example:

At purchaseAt resale 10 years later
Full market value£300,000£420,000
Your discount30%30% (same — fixed forever)
Your sale price£210,000£294,000
Open market price£210,000£420,000
Your equity vs open marketSame£126,000 less

Your equity still grows — because the discounted value grows as the market rises. But it grows more slowly than if you had bought at full market value.

This is the honest long-term trade-off of the scheme.


You can only sell to another buyer who meets all of the First Homes Scheme eligibility criteria at the time of your sale — including the income cap, first-time buyer status, and mortgage requirement that were applicable when you bought.

If the eligibility criteria have changed since you purchased, the criteria that apply to your resale are those that were in place when you originally bought — not the current criteria.

If you cannot find an eligible buyer after a reasonable marketing period, there are specific circumstances where the local authority may provide assistance or waive certain criteria.

However, this is not guaranteed and varies by council.


The resale restriction applies from the very first day you own the property — there is no minimum ownership period before you can sell.

You can sell after two years, five years, or twenty years and the same discount covenant applies every time.

However, selling early can be financially costly for practical reasons.

You will have paid legal fees, survey costs, mortgage arrangement fees, and potentially Stamp Duty on purchase.

Selling quickly means those upfront costs are spread over a very short ownership period — reducing your effective financial return significantly.

There is no restriction on selling early — but the economics rarely favour it.


Yes — your equity does grow, but more slowly than on an equivalent open-market purchase.

Because you bought at a discounted price, your mortgage balance is lower relative to the property’s open-market value.

As the open-market value rises, your discounted sale price rises proportionally.

Your equity is the difference between the discounted sale price and your outstanding mortgage.

The important thing to understand is that you capture 100% of the growth in the discounted value — you are not capped at a fixed sale price.

A 10% rise in the open market value translates to a 10% rise in your discounted sale price too.

What you do not capture is the uplift from buying at below market value. An open-market buyer who paid £300,000 for a property now worth £420,000 gains £120,000.

You paid £210,000 for the same property and can now sell for £294,000 — a gain of £84,000. The discount has cost you £36,000 in potential equity — but saved you £90,000 on purchase price.

Over the long term the scheme still represents a substantial financial benefit for most buyers.


You can take in a lodger — a single person renting a room in the property while you continue to live there as your main residence. This has no time restriction.

You cannot rent out the entire property — making yourself a landlord — for more than two years in total during your ownership. “The property must remain your main residence. If you need to move temporarily for work, you may apply to your local council for permission to let the property for a defined period.”

If you need to move temporarily for work, you may apply to your local council for permission to let the property for a defined period.

Renting the property out in full without council permission is a breach of the First Homes covenant and can result in legal action from the local authority.


The discount percentage is fixed — but it is always applied to the current market value at the time of sale, whether that value is higher or lower than when you purchased.

If the market falls and your property’s open-market value drops below your original purchase price, your discounted sale price falls too.

In extreme cases this could mean selling for less than your remaining mortgage balance — creating negative equity.

This risk is not unique to First Homes buyers — any homeowner faces negative equity risk in a falling market.

However, First Homes buyers have a smaller buffer because their purchase price was already discounted, meaning a market fall hits their discounted value relatively quickly.

This is why First Homes is generally best suited to buyers who plan to own for at least five to seven years — long enough to benefit from market recovery cycles.



No. Only specific properties where the local planning authority has attached a First Homes planning condition — typically through a Section 106 agreement — are eligible.

Not every new-build development includes First Homes properties.

The developer cannot choose to offer the First Homes discount voluntarily on a standard plot.

The condition must be written into the planning permission for that specific development. This is why availability varies enormously by location — some areas have many First Homes developments, others have very few.

To find First Homes properties in your area, search directly on developer websites, register with Homes England, use the Share to Buy search tool, or contact your local planning authority for a list of developments with First Homes conditions attached.


When you agree to purchase a First Homes property, the developer will ask for a reservation fee — typically between £500 and £2,000.

This takes the property off the market while you arrange your mortgage and instructed solicitors.

Whether the fee is refundable depends entirely on the developer’s terms and the circumstances of withdrawal.

Most developers will refund the reservation fee if the developer is unable to proceed — for example, if there are issues with planning permission or build delays beyond contracted timescales.

If you choose to withdraw, most developers will not refund the fee. Always read the reservation agreement carefully before paying — and have a solicitor review it if there is anything unclear.


Stamp Duty Land Tax is calculated on your discounted purchase price — not on the full market value of the property. This is one of the most financially significant advantages of the scheme.

Because First Homes buyers purchase at a minimum 30% discount, many purchases fall below the £300,000 first-time buyer nil-rate threshold — meaning a large proportion of First Homes buyers pay zero Stamp Duty.

Full market valueDiscountPurchase priceStamp Duty
£350,00030%£245,000£0
£400,00030%£280,000£0
£450,00030%£315,000£750
£500,00040%£300,000£0
£600,00050%£300,000£0

This is a genuine risk on any new-build purchase — not unique to First Homes. If a developer enters administration before your property is completed, the outcome depends on several factors.

If the property is covered by the NHBC Buildmark warranty or a similar structural warranty, the warranty provider may step in to complete or compensate buyers in certain circumstances.

This protection applies during the build phase.

Your reservation fee is unlikely to be recoverable as an unsecured creditor in administration proceedings.

This is another reason to ensure any reservation fee paid is as small as possible and that you have read the reservation agreement carefully.

Your conveyancing solicitor should check the developer’s financial standing as part of their due diligence.

Asking for evidence of structural warranty cover and stage payment protections before exchanging contracts is strongly advisable.


QuestionAnswer
Minimum discount30% off market value
Income cap EnglandUnder £80,000 previous tax year
Income cap LondonUnder £90,000 previous tax year
Price cap England£250,000 after discount
Price cap London£420,000 after discount
Minimum deposit5% of discounted price
Mortgage minimum50% of discounted price
Cash purchaseNot allowed
LISA compatibleYes — if discounted price under £450,000
Key worker priorityYes — 3-month window typically
Armed forces exemptionYes — local criteria do not apply
Resale restrictionSame % discount passed on — forever
Can you remortgageYes — with some lender restrictions
Can you let it outNo — maximum 2 years total in full
Can you take a lodgerYes — no restriction
Stamp DutyCalculated on discounted price
Available in ScotlandNo — England only
Available in WalesNo — England only

Related guides

First Homes Scheme UK — complete 2026 guide (core topic — start here) → Who qualifies for the First Homes Scheme? — full eligibility checklist 2026 → First Homes Scheme resale restrictions — what to know before buying → Do first-time buyers pay Stamp Duty in 2026? — exact amounts for every price band → Shared Ownership vs First Homes Scheme — which is better for you? →


All facts, eligibility rules, resale terms, mortgage requirements, and scheme details in this article are verified against official government publications and established housing organisations. All links confirmed April 2026.

[1] GOV.UK — First Homes Scheme: first-time buyer’s guide Publisher: HM Government · Last updated: October 2024 https://www.gov.uk/first-homes-scheme Used for: income caps · property price caps · first-time buyer definition · key worker priority · armed forces exemption · England-only rule · mortgage requirement · 3-month local criteria window

[2] GOV.UK — First Homes Scheme: how to apply Publisher: HM Government · Last updated: October 2024 https://www.gov.uk/first-homes-scheme/how-to-apply Used for: Section 106 planning condition requirement · how to find First Homes properties · solicitor requirement at application

[3] DLUHC — First Homes Local Authority Guidance Version 2 Publisher: Department for Levelling Up Housing and Communities · February 2024 https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/65cdda7a1d939500129466c9/First_Homes_Local_Authority_Guidance_V.2_-_February_2024.pdf Used for: resale covenant in perpetuity · local authority income cap powers · equity growth calculations · discount percentage fixed at point of purchase · eligibility criteria at resale

[4] Malvern Hills District Council — First Homes eligibility criteria Publisher: Malvern Hills District Council · Verified April 2026 https://www.malvernhills.gov.uk/housing/housing-advice/affordable-housing/first-homes-scheme Used for: Finance Act 2003 Schedule 6ZA legal definition · inherited property counts as prior ownership · income cap uses previous tax year · 50% mortgage minimum confirmed

[5] Hull City Council — First Homes eligibility Publisher: Hull City Council · Verified April 2026 https://www.hull.gov.uk/regeneration-1/first-homes-scheme/2 Used for: joint buyers — both must be first-time buyers · never owned in UK or abroad confirmation

[6] Bury Council — First Homes Scheme Publisher: Bury Council · Verified April 2026 https://www.bury.gov.uk/housing/buying-a-home/affordable-housing-types/first-homes-scheme Used for: cash purchase not allowed · Islamic home purchase plan accepted · 50% mortgage minimum · resale to eligible buyer at same discount · maximum 2-year full letting period

[7] Medway Council — First Homes eligibility criteria Publisher: Medway Council · Verified April 2026 https://www.medway.gov.uk/info/200585/first_homes_scheme/1548/eligibility_criteria_for_first_homes Used for: income cap does not apply after purchase · lodger permission with no time limit · 2-year maximum full letting restriction · income increase after purchase does not trigger resale

[8] MoneyHelper — Government schemes for first-time home buyers Publisher: MoneyHelper — Money and Pensions Service · Last updated: February 2026 https://www.moneyhelper.org.uk/en/homes/buying-a-home/government-schemes-for-first-time-home-buyers-and-existing-homeowners Used for: LISA 25% bonus · LISA £450,000 property cap · LISA 12-month minimum holding period · LISA withdrawal penalty

[9] GOV.UK — Stamp Duty Land Tax: residential property rates Publisher: HM Government and HMRC · Last updated: October 2024 https://www.gov.uk/stamp-duty-land-tax/residential-property-rates Used for: Stamp Duty calculated on discounted price · first-time buyer nil-rate threshold £300,000 · all SDLT rate bands

[10] Miller Rose — What’s available for first-time buyers in 2026 Publisher: Miller Rose · Last updated: December 2026 https://millerrose.co.uk/news/whats-available-for-first-time-buyers/ Used for: remortgaging First Homes properties — lender caution around covenant · discounted value used for LTV calculations · staircasing costs

[11] NHBC — Buildmark warranty Publisher: National House Building Council · Verified April 2026 https://www.nhbc.co.uk/builders/products-and-services/buildmark/ Used for: developer administration risk · Buildmark warranty coverage during build phase · structural warranty protections

[12] Which? — First-time buyer schemes UK Publisher: Which? · Last updated: March 2026 https://www.which.co.uk/money/mortgages-and-property/first-time-buyers/first-time-buyer-schemes-aIfM21c2glM4 Used for: mortgage lender eligibility for First Homes · reservation fee terms · developer in-house adviser limitations

[13] The Mortgage Dog — SDLT and JBSP guidance Publisher: The Mortgage Dog · Verified April 2026 https://themortgagedog.com/stampdutycalculator Used for: Joint Borrower Sole Proprietor — parent on mortgage not title deeds does not affect first-time buyer eligibility


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