Heron Financial arranged £20,000 of additional borrowing at a very low LTV for joint clients in Sheffield, one a self-employed business owner and director, the other an admin professional, against their family home valued at £650,000. With substantial existing equity in the property, the priority was matching the small borrowing requirement to the right structure (further advance, capital raise remortgage or second charge) and the right lender at competitive terms. Heron Financial placed the case with HSBC, and the borrowing completed in May 2026.
The clients
The clients were a couple in Sheffield, settled in a £650,000 family home they had owned for some years. One applicant runs their own business as a self-employed director; the other works in administration. The household had built up substantial equity in the property over time, well above £400,000, and wanted to borrow a modest additional amount of £20,000 against the home for a defined purpose.
They came to Heron Financial in a position that’s surprisingly common but rarely discussed: cash-rich in property terms, with a small specific borrowing need, and unsure of the best route to access it. The amount was too small for most “release equity” conversations and too specific for a standard remortgage. The right answer needed thinking through.
The case at a glance
- Clients: Joint applicants, one self-employed (business owner / director), one employed (admin)
- Nationality: British
- Occupations: Self-employed business owner / director + administration professional
- Property type: Two-bedroom semi-detached house
- Location: Sheffield
- Current property valuation: £650,000
- New borrowing amount: £20,000
- Resulting LTV on the new borrowing component: very low (around 3% against valuation)
- Lender: HSBC for Intermediaries
- Transaction type: Additional borrowing / further advance style
- Completion: May 2026
The challenge
A £20,000 borrowing requirement doesn’t sound like a case that needs careful broking, but the small amount is exactly why it does. The decisions here weren’t about underwriting risk. They were about choosing the right route to access the money cleanly and without unnecessary cost.
Three possible routes for additional borrowing. Homeowners wanting to borrow more typically have three options:
A further advance from the existing lender (additional borrowing on top of the existing mortgage, often on a separate rate from the main loan)
A capital raise remortgage to a new lender, taking the full outstanding balance plus the additional amount on one new product
A second charge mortgage (a separate secured loan from a different lender sitting behind the main mortgage)
The right route depends on the size of the existing mortgage, the rate on it, any early repayment charges, the borrower’s affordability, and how the borrowing purpose is treated. On small additional amounts like £20,000, a full remortgage often isn’t cost-effective because product fees and legal costs eat into the benefit. A further advance is frequently the cleanest answer.
Self-employed income on a low loan amount. When one applicant is a self-employed business owner / director, the income assessment is more involved than on a PAYE-only application, even when the borrowing is modest. Lenders typically want two years of self-employed accounts or SA302s, with income assessed as either salary plus dividends or salary plus share of net profit. The case still needs the income to stand up to the lender’s affordability calculation, even at £20,000.
The strong equity position. With substantial equity in the property and a tiny additional borrowing amount, the case sat at one of the lowest LTV positions any lender would see. From an underwriting risk perspective, this is as comfortable as lending gets. The work was in the structure, not the risk.
The purpose of the borrowing. Lenders ask why borrowers want additional funds and the purpose affects how the case is underwritten. Common acceptable purposes include home improvements, debt consolidation, business support, family gifting, or specific one-off costs. Some purposes face tighter criteria. Confirming the purpose was acceptable to the chosen lender before submission kept the underwriting clean.
How Heron Financial approached the recommendation
The Heron adviser focused on the structure question first, because on a small additional borrowing case, choosing the right route is more important than chasing the headline rate.
Comparing the three routes. Heron Financial talked the clients through further advance vs capital raise remortgage vs second charge for their specific situation, factoring in the existing mortgage details, any early repayment charges, the borrowing purpose and the lender’s appetite at each route. On a £20,000 amount, the further advance route through their existing lender (HSBC) was the cleanest and most cost-effective option.
Self-employed income evidenced cleanly. The self-employed business owner’s income was prepared with two years of accounts / SA302s and any associated documentation, so the lender’s affordability check ran smoothly even though the borrowing amount was modest.
Lender choice. HSBC was the right home for this borrowing because the existing mortgage sat with them and the further advance pathway was simpler, cheaper and quicker than moving the whole mortgage to a new lender for a small top-up.
Documentation and purpose. The purpose of the borrowing was confirmed and documented with the application, so underwriting didn’t slow down asking the question later.
The outcome
The additional borrowing completed in May 2026. The clients now have:
£20,000 of additional borrowing on top of their existing HSBC mortgage
A very low overall LTV against the property’s £650,000 valuation
The borrowing deployed for the agreed purpose
No need to move the existing mortgage or trigger any unnecessary product or legal costs
What this means for buyers in a similar position
If you own your home and you want to borrow a relatively small additional amount, say £10,000 to £50,000, the temptation is to assume you need to remortgage the whole thing. Often you don’t. A further advance from your existing lender, or a second charge from a specialist lender, can be cheaper, faster and simpler than refinancing the full mortgage. The right route depends on your existing mortgage rate, any early repayment charges, the size of the borrowing, the purpose and the lender’s appetite. A broker who looks at all three routes, rather than defaulting to a full remortgage, can save you real money on what looks like a small piece of work.
FAQs
What is a further advance on a mortgage?
A further advance is additional borrowing taken out on top of an existing mortgage with the same lender. It usually sits on a separate product and rate from the original mortgage and is subject to the lender’s affordability check on the new borrowing amount. It’s often the cleanest route to release a small amount of equity without moving the whole mortgage.
Further advance, capital raise remortgage, or second charge, what's the difference?
Further advance: Additional borrowing on top of your existing mortgage with the same lender. Often cheapest for small amounts.
Capital raise remortgage: Move the full mortgage to a new lender, taking the existing balance plus the additional amount as one new mortgage. Can make sense for larger amounts or when the existing rate is poor.
Second charge: A separate secured loan from a different lender that sits behind the main mortgage. Useful when you want to keep the main mortgage untouched (e.g. it’s on a great rate or carries an early repayment charge).
Can a self-employed business owner get a small additional mortgage?
Yes. Self-employed business owners and directors can access further advances, capital raise remortgages and second charges, subject to the lender’s standard self-employed income assessment (typically two years of accounts or SA302s). The income still needs to support the additional borrowing under affordability rules, even when the amount is small.
Why might it be better to take a further advance than to remortgage?
Because remortgaging the whole loan often triggers product fees, legal costs and (sometimes) early repayment charges on the existing mortgage. For a small additional amount, those costs can outweigh the benefit. A further advance keeps the existing mortgage in place and adds the small extra amount on top, usually at lower overall cost.
How much can I borrow as a further advance on my home?
It depends on your equity position, your income, the lender’s affordability and the purpose. Most lenders will lend up to their standard maximum LTV (typically 75–85% of the property value, including the existing mortgage and the further advance combined). Affordability rules apply to the new borrowing, not the existing balance.