House purchase plans Employers are coming to the rescue of their cash-strapped graduate recruits by introducing new schemes that substitute a pension for help getting on the property ladder or clearing student debt. Company pensions are an attractive perk but many require staff to make a contribution. That is why people in their twenties, struggling under student loan repayments and desperate to buy their first property, often decide not to join. Would-be first-time buyers who do not want to join some company pension schemes are being offered a house purchase plan, under which the employer contributes a percentage of the employee’s salary for two years into a savings account dedicated to funding the deposit. To benefit from the scheme employees must also put the same percentage of salary aside each month. Once the property has been bought the company pays the same percentage of salary towards the employee's mortgage for the next three years, reducing over the next four years. As the mortgage contribution is phased out, the employee is moved back into the pension scheme. These "flex" schemes effectively give employees an annual allowance to spend on a menu of benefits and let you tailor the benefits to your needs. Article date: 07.07 | ![]() | ||
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