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In Focus: Why alternative routes onto the ladder now matter more than ever 

Unsplash - 09/07/2026

With affordability pressures continuing to reshape the path to climbing the homeownership ladder, many younger buyers are looking beyond traditional routes. In our next ‘In Focus‘ article, Peter Hawley, Director at SOWN (part of LRG), explores why alternative homeownership models are becoming increasingly important and considers how the mortgage and property sector can do more to raise awareness of the options available to aspiring buyers.

Homeownership remains out of reach for many younger buyers

For many younger buyers, the property ladder no longer looks like a ladder: it looks like a wall.

The aspiration to own has not disappeared, but what has changed is the distance between that aspiration and the practical ability to act on it. Rents remain high, deposit savings are slower, mortgage affordability shows little sign of improving this year, and the gap between incomes and house prices has widened in many parts of the country.

For a generation that has studied, worked, saved and planned, the reward of homeownership feels unrealistic.

This matters not only for individuals, but for the wider mortgage and property sector. If younger buyers conclude that homeownership is unrealistic, they disengage, and this is exactly what needs to be addressed. 

For us, the added challenge is not simply to help those who are already mortgage-ready but to rebuild confidence among those who are not quite ready and need a more realistic pathway. That is where alternative routes onto the ladder become so important.

Life after Help to Buy

The end of Help to Buy left a substantial gap. Whatever one’s view of the scheme, it was successful in giving first-time buyers a route into new-build ownership with a smaller deposit, and it made that route highly visible.

It had a recognisable brand, a simple message and the authority that comes with government backing, appealing to buyers, lenders and developers.

We now have a void in the space where Help to Buy previously existed. There are still options (high loan-to-value mortgages, First Homes, Rent to Buy and Shared Ownership) but from the buyer’s point of view, it’s a more fragmented and confusing picture. 

Why Shared Ownership deserves greater attention

Shared Ownership deserves a much larger place in this conversation. It is an established tenure that enables eligible buyers to purchase a share of a home and pay rent on the remaining share, with the opportunity to increase ownership over time.

For those who cannot buy outright but want the security and discipline of ownership, it can provide a practical bridge between renting and full ownership.

Partly due to the affordability crisis, the profile of the shared ownership buyer is changing. Traditionally, the tenure was most closely associated with younger first-time buyers, particularly those in their mid-20s to mid-30s, but we are seeing people who might once have used Help to Buy, would-be outright purchasers who have been priced out by higher mortgage and deposit costs and households who earn too much for some forms of housing support but too little to buy in the open market.

The average age of a Shared Ownership buyer is now mid to late thirties.

Supporting the ‘missing middle’

This “missing middle” is one of the most important affordability challenges facing the sector. In high-value areas, there are households with solid incomes who still cannot buy without assistance.

Some are key workers, but an increasing number of professionals are now looking to Shared Ownership. 

If the property sector is serious about supporting younger buyers, it must acknowledge that affordability is not uniform and a product that works in one region may be insufficient in another.

The future is unlikely to lie in one flagship scheme, but in a more varied toolkit that reflects how differently affordability is experienced across the country.

That is why Shared Ownership thresholds and eligibility rules need continued scrutiny. 

Making alternative routes part of mainstream advice

The industry cannot solve this alone, but it can do more. Advisers, lenders, housing associations, developers and specialist sales teams should treat alternative routes into ownership as mainstream advice, not a niche afterthought.

That means explaining them earlier, more clearly and with less jargon; helping buyers understand deposits, rent, service charges, staircasing, resale processes and long-term affordability; and being honest about limitations.

Shared ownership is not the answer for everyone, but it should be considered by far more people than it currently is.

If Help to Buy demonstrated anything, it is that consumer awareness changes behaviour. Shared Ownership needs clearer national communication, better signposting and stronger policy recognition.

At present, too much responsibility sits with individual providers and advisers. A more coherent national message would help build trust, tackle myths and give younger buyers the confidence to ask informed questions.

A more flexible path to homeownership

There is no single replacement for Help to Buy. The market has moved beyond the idea that one product can meet every affordability challenge. But that should not lead to drift. Younger buyers need a range of realistic options, explained properly and supported consistently.

We must stop treating homeownership as a binary choice between renting and buying: for many younger people, the first step onto the ladder may be smaller, more gradual and more structured than it was for previous generations. 

The real test is whether the industry can meet buyers where they are, rather than where we wish they were. Shared Ownership, alongside other alternative models, offers one of the clearest ways to do that.

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