Phase 2 turns your financial snapshot into buying power. It runs in a deliberate order — credit first, then deposit, affordability, the true costs of buying, mortgage knowledge, and finally an Agreement in Principle — because each step feeds the next. Its exit condition is concrete: an AIP certificate that makes estate agents take your offers seriously.
Why this phase has the longest lead time
Credit problems take months to fix, deposits take months to build, and self-employed income needs whole tax years of evidence. Starting Phase 2 six months before you want to view homes is not conservative — it is the schedule that makes Phase 3 relaxed instead of desperate.
The order matters
Checking credit before applying for anything prevents wasted hard searches. Understanding total buying costs before setting a deposit target prevents the classic error of saving exactly a deposit and nothing else. Learning mortgage types before talking to a broker means you can interrogate a recommendation instead of just accepting it.
What you will hold at the end
A credit file you have read and repaired, a deposit strategy with a named LTV target, a realistic monthly budget, an itemised costs estimate, a view on mortgage type, a broker-or-direct decision, and a current AIP. That bundle is what 'proceedable buyer' means to an agent.
Your action list
Practical tips
- Do the whole phase before booking a single viewing; budget certainty changes how agents treat you.
- Recheck this phase's numbers whenever income, rates or your target price change meaningfully.
What can go wrong
- A headline borrowing figure from an online calculator is not an AIP, and an AIP is not a mortgage offer — do not spend either.
- Applying for new credit mid-phase (a car, a sofa, a holiday) can undo months of preparation days before it pays off.
- PropertySquares provides education, not financial or legal advice. Verify current rules and obtain advice for your circumstances before acting.