Change from an endowment to a capital and interest mortgage
An endowment mortgage is a secured loan on which only interest is payable, accompanied by an endowment life assurance policy which is intended to pay off the capital borrowed either at the end of the agreed term or on the death of the borrower (whichever is the sooner).
For the borrower in debt, it is essential that the full amounts of both the endowment insurance payments and the interest on the loan itself are repaid on, or shortly after, the due date.
The creditor relies on the insurance company to repay the capital amount lent at the end of the loan period and, if payments to the insurance company stop, the creditor is likely to call in its loan on the basis that its security is at risk, unless an acceptable proposal for repayment of the capital at the end of the loan can be made. If, on the other hand, payments to the creditor are not kept up, the amount outstanding on the loan increases and is likely to become more than the amount that will be produced by the insurance policy at its maturity. Endowment mortgages are therefore less flexible than repayment ones.
To have the flexibility to capitalise arrears, extend the period of a loan or negotiate repayment of arrears over several years, an endowment mortgage needs to be changed to a repayment mortgage. The creditor does this automatically for some clients once the endowment premium is significantly in arrears.
However, to cease paying, surrendering or selling an endowment policy is a major financial decision and should not be taken without specialist advice from an independent financial adviser.