Home Mortgage Homeownership out of reach for newly qualified NHS workers
Mortgage

Homeownership out of reach for newly qualified NHS workers

Share



Band 5 NHS workers, newly qualified entry-level clinical professionals, do not have the salaries to access a mortgage to buy a home, a broker’s research found.

A study from Boon Brokers found that with salaries ranging from £32,073 to £39,043, an NHS worker with a 5% deposit would not be able to afford a home in many UK cities. 

The borrowing shortfall is the widest in London, where an NHS employee on a Band 5 salary with a 5.5 income multiple would only be able to borrow up to £204,925, compared to an average property price of £463,000. This would leave them with a borrowing gap of £234,925. 

An average-priced home in Bristol would also be out of reach, as the maximum they could borrow would be £170,770, compared to an average property price of £309,000, giving them a loan shortfall of £122,780. 

The four cities that would be affordable for an NHS worker on a Band 5 salary would be Nottingham, Newcastle, Liverpool and Glasgow, Boon Brokers found. 

NHS Band 5 Salary vs UK First-Time Buyer Property Prices

City Average First-Time Buyer Property Price Mortgage Required (95% LTV) Maximum Mortgage for NHS Band 5 (5.5x) Borrowing Shortfall
London £463,000 £439,850 £204,925 £234,925
Bristol £309,000 £293,550 £170,770 £122,780
Edinburgh £244,000 £231,800 £170,770 £61,030
Manchester £233,000 £221,350 £170,770 £50,580
Cardiff £233,000 £221,350 £170,770 £50,580
Leeds £213,000 £202,350 £170,770 £31,580
Birmingham £211,000 £200,450 £170,770 £29,680
Southampton £208,000 £197,600 £170,770 £26,830
Norwich £203,000 £192,850 £170,770 £22,080
Sheffield £196,000 £186,200 £170,770 £15,430
Belfast £181,000 £171,950 £170,770 £1,180
Nottingham £177,000 £168,150 £170,770 Mortgage Achievable
Newcastle £178,000 £169,100 £170,770 Mortgage Achievable
Liverpool £167,000 £158,650 £170,770 Mortgage Achievable
Glasgow £166,000 £157,700 £170,770 Mortgage Achievable

 


Sponsored

Aldermore Insights with Jon Cooper: Edition 9 – Why lending strategy is becoming more central in buy to let

Sponsored by Aldermore


Higher salaries main route to homeownership 

The firm said that while some lower-paid NHS workers might be able to get onto the property ladder by purchasing a flat or maisonette, homeownership was inaccessible until employees progressed to Band 6, 7 or 8a salaries. 

Band 6 salaries start at £39,959 and the maximum Band 8a salary is £64,750. 

Band Example roles <2 yrs Mid range Top of band
Band 1
Closed to new entrants (Dec 2018)
Domestic support worker, housekeeping assistant, driver, nursery assistant
Band 2 Healthcare assistant, secretary/typist, security officer, domestic team leader £23,615 £23,615
Band 3 Emergency care assistant, trainee clinical coder, OT support worker £24,071 £25,674
Band 4 Assistant practitioner, pharmacy technician, dental nurse £26,530 £29,114
Band 5 Nurse, ODP, podiatrist, therapeutic radiographer, ICT test analyst £29,970 £32,324 £36,483
Band 6 School nurse, experienced paramedic, health records manager, clinical psychology trainee £37,338 £39,405 £44,962
Band 7 Communications manager, high intensity therapist, advanced speech & language therapist £46,148 £48,526 £52,809
Band 8a Modern matron, nurse consultant, dental lab manager, project/programme manager £53,755 £56,454 £60,504
Band 8b Head of education & training, clinical physiology service manager, head orthoptist £62,215 £66,246 £72,293
Band 8c Head of HR, consultant clinical scientist, consultant paramedic £74,290 £78,814 £85,601
Band 8d Consultant psychologist, chief nurse, chief finance manager, estates manager £88,168 £93,572 £101,677
Band 9 Podiatric consultant (surgery), chief finance manager, director of estates & facilities £105,385 £111,740 £121,271

Boon Brokers’ research found that the NHS Band 7 salary was the minimum needed in Manchester, Cardiff and Edinburgh to buy a home with a 95% loan-to-value (LTV) mortgage. 

Homeownership in Bristol was unaffordable for NHS workers until Band 8a.  

Even in cities with lower property prices, such as Birmingham, Southampton and Norwich, a minimum salary of at least Band 6 was required for a single homeowner. 

Boon Brokers said there was a “growing disconnect” between NHS salaries and modern property prices in many UK cities. It said homeownership was increasingly shaped by geography, salary progression and longer saving timelines. 

The firm said: “Across several UK cities, the research suggests that average first-time buyer property costs are no longer keeping pace with NHS salary growth, leaving many workers facing increasingly unrealistic pathways towards long-term homeownership, despite full-time employment within the NHS.”





Source link

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Don't Miss

DigitalOcean, Braze, and Fastly Stocks Trade Up, What You Need To Know

A number of stocks jumped in the afternoon session after investors continued to buy the dip despite renewed geopolitical jitters as the U.S.-Iran...

Newcastle now face ‘big question marks’ around PIF investment: ‘They’re going to be in big trouble’

Manh Tung, Breaking Media. Sat 11 April 2026 7:15, UK Newcastle United’s ownership still need to show signs that they are committed to...

Related Articles

Gen H reduces mortgage rates by up to 0.20%

Gen H has reduced two and five-year fixed mortgage rates...

With mortgage payments cheaper than rents, small flats become hot property in China

After a five-year property slump, an increasing number of tenants in China’s...

Intermediaries hold steady despite volatile market

An unusually active start to 2026 as borrowers advance mortgage plans in...

Mortgage and refinance rates today, May 29, 2026: Fixed-rate purchase loans inching up

The 30-year fixed-rate rose by 2 basis points from the day prior...