Many using credit cards to pay mortgage

Up to one million households have borrowed money on a credit card to pay their mortgage or  rent over the past year, a charity's study suggests.

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Housing charity Shelter said this figure represented 6% of UK homes.

Shelter said people in lower social groups had been most likely to need to use their credit  cards, but that the middle classes had also been affected.

The charity said the figure was a "shocking discovery". Its survey questioned 2,022 people.
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Shelter said it urged people who were struggling to keep up with their housing costs to  urgently seek expert advice.
"If people are already struggling to the extent that they fear losing their home,  increasing credit card debt cannot be the answer," said Kay Boycott, Shelter's director of  policy and campaigns.

Its survey suggested that for lower social groups, the number of people resorting to using  their credit cards over the past 12 months rose to 8%, while the figure for middle class  people totalled 4%.

Shelter said many people who had resorted to using their credit cards were now at risk of  becoming homeless, as in some cases defaulting on their credit card repayments might lead  to their homes being repossessed.

Last year, Citizens Advice reported that some lenders were increasingly going to court to  obtain a charging order, which secures a previously unsecured debt on the borrower's  property.

While cases of actual repossessions following this were rare, such a move would make it  possible for a lender to ask a court to order the sale of a property to recover a debt.

Citizens Advice found that since 2000 there had been a 722% rise in the number of charging  order applications by unsecured creditors.

The charity also found that 74% of the 132,000 applications in 2007 resulted in charging  orders being made.