Should your mortgage cover solar panels and battery storage too?

Community benefits from rooftop power solar scheme

A start-up mortgage broker is pushing for major lenders to bundle home loans with finance for solar panel and battery storage installation.

Digital mortgage service Uno Home Loans told Energy Matters the move would boost property values.

CEO Vincent Turner said currently banks see solar and batteries as distinct from home buying.

“There’s nothing stopping [home buyers] from asking banks to include solar installation in the mortgage,” he said.

“It’s just that banks won’t treat it any differently to you going and buying a new plasma TV or a jet ski. Banks view it as an expense, rather than as something that potentially increases the value of a property.”

The sums add up for solar and battery installation

High energy prices and low interest rates mean new home owners can save through solar panel and battery storage installation.

Uno calculated the costs using NSW feed-in tariffs and energy costs, plus current record low interest rates. They concluded that a homeowner with a $600,000 mortgage who borrowed $16,544 to install solar and storage would be more than $1,800 better off each year.

Mortgages could include solar system installation.
Solar panels and battery storage installation could be included in your mortgage. Image: Pixabay

“Our argument is that lenders should treat solar differently, given it adds value to the home and improves the cash flow,” Mr Turner said. “This is how negative gearing is treated, for example.

“This has come about because we’ve reached a tipping point of high energy costs combined with low interest rates,” Mr Turner told One Step Off The Grid this week.

“Solar now makes sense financially even for those people who need to borrow to fund the installation. Solar and storage means the cash flow of house will be better. So why wouldn’t they factor that in?”

Mortgage insurance pricing solar out of the equation?

Mr Turner described solar installation as “home improvement” for home buyers. But there is a negative side to increasing the size of the mortgage that could put off some buyers.

“People who are already at an 80 per cent Loan Value Ratio; that is, they have 80 per cent of their property’s value against a mortgage, might be hesitant to add the cost of solar installation to a mortgage because they’ll be subject to mortgage insurance.”

 

Get a quick solar quote, or contact us today toll free on 1800 EMATTERS or email our friendly team for expert, obligation-free advice!

Other Energy Matters news services: