Coventry Building Society: Mortgages and Remortgages
 
You should consider choosing Coventry if you are interested in any of the following mortgages: fixed, flexible, capped, SVR (Standard Variable Rate) and Buy to let.
 
Use our simple loan form or mortgage form to talk with a financial adviser to see if Coventry loans or mortgages could be right for you.
 
As a building society, Coventry has no outside owners and is owned by its savers and borrowers. So Coventry's customers are more than just customers they are members. Coventry does not have to pay dividends to outside shareholders and so all of its decisions can be made in the interests of its members. It means that Coventry is free to play a more active role in the community.
 
Coventry Building Society launched Godiva Mortgages Limited in March 2007 to provide specialist lending services to the mortgage intermediary market. Building on the proven service standards and capacities of Coventry Building Society, Godiva Mortgages provides enhanced focus in the key intermediary business areas of buy to let, self certified, credit impaired and higher loan to value lending. Customers who take out a mortgage or loan from Godiva Mortgages Limited are not members of Coventry Building Society.
 
The Coventry Permanent Economic Building Society was founded in 1884 and in 1983 following a merger with the Coventry Provident, the building society became known as Coventry Building Society.

 
 



 
 
24th June 2008
The average cost of a two-year fixed-rate mortgage has broken through the 7% barrier. Homeowners wanting to take out a two-year deal can now expect
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24th June 2008
Mortgage lending for house purchase by the UK's main banks has fallen to its lowest level on record. The British Bankers Association (BBA) said th
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19th June 2008
Gross mortgage lending totalled an estimated £25.5 billion in May, down only 2% from £26.1 billion in April but 19% from the £31.5 billion high in May
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19th June 2008
HBOS, the UK's biggest mortgage lender, has forecast that UK house prices are set to fall by 9% this year. The banking group, which owns the Halif
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