Before You Apply: The 3–6 Month Preparation Window
The work you do before applying has more impact on approval than anything you do during the application itself. Lenders assess your recent financial behaviour, so the 3–6 months before application are critical.
Preparation Checklist
Action
When
Why It Matters
Check your credit reports (all three agencies)
6 months before
Identify errors, defaults, or issues to fix before applying
Register on the electoral roll
6 months before
Confirms your identity and address; missing registration causes automatic declines at some lenders
Pay down or clear credit card balances
3–6 months before
Reduces committed expenditure and improves credit utilisation ratio
Stop all gambling transactions
6+ months before
Many lenders auto-decline applicants with gambling on statements
Avoid new credit applications
3–6 months before
Each application creates a hard search that temporarily reduces your score
Keeps statements clean and reduces visible commitments
Ensure all bills are paid on time
6+ months before
Late payments remain on your credit file for 6 years
Gather all required documents
1–2 months before
Having everything ready speeds up the application significantly
Get an Agreement in Principle
1 month before reserving
Confirms a lender will consider your application at the amount needed
Credit Scores and Reports: What Lenders Actually See
The Three Credit Reference Agencies
UK lenders access your credit data from one or more of these agencies. Each holds slightly different data and calculates scores differently:
Agency
Score Range
"Good" Threshold
How to Check
Experian
0–999
881+ ("Good"), 961+ ("Excellent")
Free via Experian app or MSE Credit Club
Equifax
0–1000
420+ ("Good"), 466+ ("Excellent")
Free via ClearScore
TransUnion
0–710
604+ ("Good"), 628+ ("Excellent")
Free via Credit Karma
What Lenders Actually Look At
Your credit score number is a guide for you — lenders don't use it directly. Instead, they examine the raw data on your credit file and run it through their own scoring models. Key factors include:
Factor
Weight
What Lenders Look For
Payment history
Highest
All payments made on time for at least 12 months (ideally 3+ years)
Credit utilisation
High
Credit card balances below 30% of limits; ideally below 10%
Electoral roll registration
High
Registered at your current address
Hard searches (applications)
Medium
Few recent credit applications (each search can reduce your score by 5–10 points)
Account age
Medium
Longer credit history is better — don't close your oldest credit card
Types of credit
Low–Medium
A mix of credit types (card, phone contract, etc.) is better than none
County Court Judgments
Critical
Any CCJ in the last 6 years can cause automatic decline
Defaults
Critical
Defaults visible for 6 years; recent defaults are worse than older ones
IVAs / bankruptcy
Critical
Most lenders decline within 6 years of discharge; some require longer
Common Credit File Errors to Fix
Wrong address: Update all credit accounts to your current address
Financial associations: If you're linked to someone with poor credit (ex-partner on a joint account), request a "notice of disassociation"
Settled debts still showing as active: Contact the creditor to update the record
Fraudulent applications: Report to the agency and add a CIFAS protective marker
Duplicate accounts: Sometimes the same debt appears twice — dispute with the agency
No Credit History?
Having no credit history is almost as problematic as having bad credit. If you've never had credit in the UK (common for first-time buyers, recent graduates, or immigrants), consider:
Opening a credit builder credit card (use for small purchases, pay in full monthly)
Putting your mobile phone contract in your name
Registering on the electoral roll immediately
Using a credit builder app like Loqbox or Thinkmoney
Start 12+ months before you plan to apply for a mortgage
Documentation Checklists by Employment Type
All Applicants (Required by Every Lender)
Document
Details
Photo ID
Valid passport or driving licence
Proof of address
Utility bill, council tax bill, or bank statement (dated within 3 months)
Bank statements
Last 3 months from all accounts holding salary or regular income
Proof of deposit
Savings statements, gift letter (if gifted), LISA statements, or sale proceeds evidence
Credit commitments
Details of any existing loans, credit cards, finance agreements
Employed (PAYE)
Document
Details
Payslips
Last 3 months (some lenders require 6 months if income includes overtime/commission)
P60
Most recent tax year
Employment contract
If recently started a new role or still in probation
Employer's reference
Some lenders request this to confirm role, salary, and permanence
Self-Employed (Sole Trader / Partnership)
Document
Details
SA302 tax calculations
Last 2–3 years (from HMRC, not your accountant)
Tax year overviews
Corresponding tax year overviews from HMRC
Accounts
Last 2–3 years prepared by a qualified accountant (some lenders accept self-prepared)
Accountant's certificate
Some lenders require a formal reference from a qualified accountant (ICAEW, ACCA, CIMA)
Business bank statements
Last 3–6 months
Company Director (Ltd Company)
Document
Details
SA302 + tax year overviews
Last 2–3 years
Company accounts
Last 2–3 years, filed with Companies House
CT600 corporation tax returns
Some lenders request these
Dividend vouchers
Evidence of dividends drawn
Company bank statements
Last 3–6 months (if using "salary + net profit" lender)
Accountant's confirmation
Letter confirming shareholding, salary, dividends, and net profit
Contractor
Document
Details
Current contract
Showing daily/hourly rate, contract duration, and client name
Previous contracts
Last 12–24 months showing continuous contracting history
CV
Some lenders request this to verify experience in the field
SA302 or payslips
Depending on whether you're inside or outside IR35
Company accounts
If contracting through a Ltd company
Document Preparation Tips
Download SA302s directly from your HMRC online account — lender-grade copies
Ensure bank statements are full monthly statements (not transaction lists)
PDF downloads from your bank's app are generally accepted; screenshots are not
If you use multiple bank accounts, provide statements for all accounts where income is received
Prepare a brief explanation for any large unusual transactions (gifts, insurance payouts, crypto sales)
Agreement in Principle: Your First Step
An Agreement in Principle (AIP) — also called a Decision in Principle (DIP) or mortgage in principle — is a lender's indication that they would lend you a specific amount, subject to full assessment.
AIP vs Full Mortgage Offer
Feature
Agreement in Principle
Full Mortgage Offer
Legally binding?
No
Yes (from the lender's side)
Credit check type
Soft or hard (lender-dependent)
Always hard
Documents required
Minimal (income, ID, basic details)
Full documentation
Validity
60–90 days typically
3–6 months
Property specific?
No (general amount)
Yes (specific property)
Guarantee of approval?
No — it's indicative only
Yes (subject to conditions being met)
Soft Search vs Hard Search AIPs
Type
Impact on Credit File
Lenders Offering This
Soft search
Not visible to other lenders; no impact on credit score
Most modern lenders and brokers
Hard search
Visible to other lenders for 12 months; may reduce score slightly
Some high-street lenders
Always ask your broker or lender whether the AIP involves a soft or hard search. If you're shopping around, use soft-search AIPs to avoid damaging your credit profile.
Why Developers Want to See Your AIP
Most developers require an AIP before accepting a reservation. It demonstrates that a lender has reviewed your basic finances and confirmed you can likely borrow the amount needed. Without an AIP, developers may refuse to take your property off the market.
The Full Application Process
Once you've reserved a property and chosen a lender (ideally with broker guidance), the full application begins.
Application Timeline
Stage
What Happens
Duration
1. Submit application
Complete the full application form and upload all documents
1–3 days
2. Initial review
Lender checks application completeness and runs credit search
1–3 days
3. Document verification
Lender verifies income, identity, and deposit source
3–7 days
4. Valuation instructed
Lender arranges property valuation (may be parallel with document review)
1–3 weeks
5. Underwriting
Underwriter reviews everything and makes the lending decision
3–10 days
6. Conditions
Any conditions must be satisfied (additional documents, clarifications)
1–7 days
7. Offer issued
Formal mortgage offer sent to you and your solicitor
1–2 days
Total typical timeline
2–6 weeks
What Speeds Up Your Application
Submit all documents at once — don't wait for follow-up requests
Respond to queries within 24 hours
Ensure documents are clear, complete, and legible
Prepare explanations for unusual transactions on bank statements
Use a broker who has direct relationships with lender processing teams
What Slows Down Your Application
Missing or unclear documents (the number one cause of delays)
Complex income (self-employed, multiple sources, foreign income)
Valuation difficulties (incomplete new build, off-plan with no comparables)
Additional conditions imposed by the underwriter
Applying during peak periods (September–November, January–March)
What Happens During Underwriting
Underwriting is where a qualified assessor (or automated system) reviews your entire application and makes the lending decision.
What the Underwriter Checks
Check
What They're Looking For
Potential Issue
Credit file
Clean payment history, no recent defaults, acceptable score
Some lenders accept probation; a broker can identify them
What to Do If Your Application Is Declined
A decline is not the end. Here's the recovery process:
Immediate Actions (First 48 Hours)
Don't panic and don't apply elsewhere immediately. Each new application adds a hard search, making the next one harder
Request the reason in writing. Under FCA rules, lenders must provide a reason for decline
Contact your broker (if you have one). They can often get more detailed feedback from the lender's business development manager
Check your credit file immediately to see what the lender saw
Common Decline Reasons and Responses
Reason Given
What It Really Means
Action
"Affordability"
Your income minus debts minus living costs doesn't support the loan at the stressed rate
Clear debts, try a lender with a different model, or reduce the loan amount
"Credit scoring"
Something on your credit file failed their internal scorecard
Check all three credit files for issues; try a lender with more flexible scoring
"Property"
The valuation or property type doesn't meet their criteria
Try a lender with different valuation panel or wider property acceptance
"Lending policy"
Catch-all reason — could be employment type, visa status, or other policy issue
Discuss with broker to identify the specific policy trigger
"Fraud prevention"
Something flagged in their anti-fraud checks (identity mismatch, suspicious activity)
Verify all documents are correct; check for identity fraud on your credit file
Should You Appeal?
Most declines cannot be formally appealed. However, if you believe the decision was based on incorrect information (wrong credit file data, income miscalculation), you can ask the lender to review with corrected information. This is more effective through a broker with a direct relationship with the lender's underwriting team.
When and How to Reapply
Reapplication Timeline
Situation
Wait Before Reapplying
Reason
Declined on affordability (debts cleared since)
1–2 months
Allow cleared debts to update on credit file
Declined on credit score
3–6 months
Allow time for score to recover from hard search and for improvements to show
Declined — switching to different lender via broker
1–2 weeks
Different lender, different criteria — but only if broker is confident of approval
Declined — CCJ or default discovered
Varies (may need to wait years)
CCJs are visible for 6 years; some lenders accept satisfied CCJs after 3+ years
Declined — property issue
Immediate (different lender)
The issue is the property, not you — a different lender may accept it
How to Strengthen Your Next Application
Address the specific reason for decline before reapplying
Use a broker who can pre-screen your application against the new lender's criteria
Consider a different product type (e.g., 5-year fix vs 2-year) to improve affordability
Provide additional evidence that wasn't in the first application
If the decline was property-related, consider a different lender rather than a different property
Special Circumstances: How to Get Approved When It's Complicated
Recently Changed Jobs
Situation
Lender Approach
Best Strategy
New job, same industry
Most lenders accept from day 1 if contract is permanent
Provide contract and first payslip
New job, different industry
Some lenders want 3–6 months in role
Seek a lender that accepts from day 1
Still in probation
Some decline; others accept if probation is standard (3–6 months)
Broker identifies probation-friendly lenders
Just started self-employment
Most require 2+ years trading
Some accept 1 year with strong figures; use a specialist broker
Adverse Credit History
Issue
How Long It Stays on File
Lender Options
Late payment (1–2 months)
6 years
Many lenders accept after 12+ months with clean record since
Default
6 years from date of default
Some lenders accept satisfied defaults after 2+ years
CCJ (under £500)
6 years
Some lenders accept if satisfied and 2+ years old
CCJ (over £500)
6 years
Specialist lenders; typically higher rates and larger deposits
IVA
6 years from registration
Very limited; usually need 3+ years since discharge
Bankruptcy
6 years from discharge
Most mainstream lenders require 6 years clear; some specialists accept earlier
Debt management plan
6 years from settlement
Some lenders accept completed DMPs; active DMPs usually declined
Non-UK Nationals
Visa/Status
Lender Availability
Key Requirements
Indefinite Leave to Remain
Wide availability — treated almost as UK national
Evidence of right to reside
Skilled Worker visa
Many lenders accept
Visa with 2+ years remaining; some want 3+ years
Spousal visa
Many lenders accept
Visa with sufficient time remaining
Student visa
Very limited
Most mainstream lenders decline
EU/EEA settled status
Wide availability
Proof of settled or pre-settled status
Foreign national (no UK residence)
Specialist international lenders
Larger deposits (usually 25%+); limited products
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take to get approved for a new build mortgage?
From full application to mortgage offer typically takes 2–6 weeks. Simple PAYE applications with clean credit can complete in 2–3 weeks. Complex cases (self-employed, adverse credit, unusual property) may take 4–8 weeks. Off-plan properties may require the valuation to be deferred until nearer completion.
Will a soft search AIP guarantee I'll be approved?
No. An AIP is indicative only. The full application involves deeper checks (detailed income verification, bank statement review, property valuation) that may reveal issues not apparent at the AIP stage. However, if you're honest and accurate at AIP, full approval is likely.
Can I get a mortgage with a default on my credit file?
Yes, but your options are more limited. Some mainstream lenders accept a satisfied default that is 2+ years old, particularly if the amount was small and there's been a clean record since. Specialist lenders can often help but at higher rates.
Do I need a perfect credit score to get a new build mortgage?
No. You don't need a perfect score. Lenders look at the underlying data rather than the score number. A "Good" rating on all three agencies is typically sufficient for mainstream products. Even "Fair" ratings can be acceptable depending on the specific data.
Should I close unused credit cards before applying?
It depends. Closing your oldest credit card can reduce your average account age and potentially lower your score. However, if you have many cards with high combined limits, some lenders view this as a risk. Close recently opened or unused cards, but keep your oldest one open with a zero or low balance.
What if I'm rejected by one lender — does that mean all will reject me?
No. Different lenders use different criteria, scoring models, and affordability calculations. A rejection by one lender is not visible to other lenders (though the hard credit search is). A broker can identify a lender whose criteria match your profile better.