I didn’t have one and have never had one. Didn’t want to be beholden or deferential to anyone. Bought my first house with a large down payment and a loan in my name. The bank said fine but for technical reasons had to fill in the blank space on a form. My wife became the guarantor, even though she is much younger than I am and earned about a third of my salary at that time
Years later, I became a guarantor for a colleague. He bought a ten million yen house near me and paid for half of it upfront. That left five million yen. I figured if anything went south I could pick up the mortgage myself. The house is smaller but much nicer than mine. A lawyer told me that if I did indeed pick up the mortgage, the house would be mine. I hoped it was true, since I don’t read Japanese and couldn’t verify this for myself. I became a guarantor. Well, my colleague is nearly finished paying for it. He asked me what I wanted for my guarantorship, if that’s even a word. I told him beer and pizza at regular intervals. I can tell you that many beers and pizzas later, free beer and pizza tastes great.
Who was your guarantor?
(Edited: Did a quick survey of six people in Japan yesterday. Five had their mortgages guaranteed by their fathers-in-law and one bought his house outright with cold, hard cash. Of the five who were dependent on grandpa, four had to list him as a co-owner. Two had to list their children as well as a pre-condition. One woman doesn’t quite remember but thinks that she, her husband, the grandparents and two kids are listed on the deed. Six people in all! Unheard of. Rather ironic since her husband constantly brags about HIS house and HIS land.)
WHO WAS YOUR GUARANTOR?
Re: WHO WAS YOUR GUARANTOR?
I am a little surprised to read that people had to list the guarantor as a co-owner!
How does that work exactly - does that mean you could get to the end of paying off a 25 year old mortgage all by yourself
but still only part-own the property ? Can the `co-owner' decide to sell the property while you are still living in it and paying it off ?
How does one decide what percentage this co-owner owns ?
Finally, which bank did you use which allowed you to avoid having such a guarantor?
How does that work exactly - does that mean you could get to the end of paying off a 25 year old mortgage all by yourself
but still only part-own the property ? Can the `co-owner' decide to sell the property while you are still living in it and paying it off ?
How does one decide what percentage this co-owner owns ?
Finally, which bank did you use which allowed you to avoid having such a guarantor?
- RetireJapan
- Site Admin
- Posts: 4732
- Joined: Wed Aug 02, 2017 6:57 am
- Location: Sendai
- Contact:
Re: WHO WAS YOUR GUARANTOR?
I don't remember having a guarantor for my mortgage, but if I did have one it was probably my father in law or my wife. They are not on the property deed in any way even if they did sign as guarantor.
English teacher and writer. RetireJapan founder. Avid reader.
eMaxis Slim Shady
eMaxis Slim Shady
-
- Veteran
- Posts: 515
- Joined: Mon Sep 16, 2019 1:30 am
- Location: Fukuoka
Re: WHO WAS YOUR GUARANTOR?
I don't remember having to have a guarantor for my mortgage. I do remember having a guarantor for apartments and retail units that we have rented in the past and still do. Japanese people on the whole do not want to be guarantors for rentals only if they are a close family member.
-
- Veteran
- Posts: 385
- Joined: Thu Aug 03, 2017 1:01 pm
Re: WHO WAS YOUR GUARANTOR?
No guarantor for mortgage, I don't think. For a house I rented, I think I used my wife's uncle. Never heard of that co-owner thing in the OP and suspect it is nonsense. Certainly nobody I know in Japan who has bought a house has had any co-owner listed.
Re: WHO WAS YOUR GUARANTOR?
No guarantor needed for me either.