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The First Home Scheme does not require its own mortgage protection policy or any life insurance assigned to it.
Your bank, however, still requires mortgage protection in the normal way. That policy is assigned to the lender only, exactly as it would be for any standard mortgage.
Despite how often people ask, there is no such thing as “First Home Scheme mortgage protection”.
Mortgage protection exists to clear debt – in other words, the money you’ve borrowed from the bank.
The First Home Scheme isn’t debt. It’s equity – a share of your home.
That single difference is where most of the confusion comes from.
Insurance is very good at clearing loans but it doesn’t automatically remove another party’s ownership stake in your property.
This is the scenario most people don’t really think through.
If a single buyer using the First Home Scheme dies, this is what actually happens:
Put simply: the mortgage dies, but the First Home Scheme lives on.
The estate (or beneficiary) inherits the property subject to the First Home Scheme’s equity share.
The property can be kept or sold. If it’s sold, the First Home Scheme must be repaid from the sale proceeds. If the intention is to keep the home outright, that equity share will need to be bought out at market value at some point.
None of this is hidden — it’s just rarely thought about when people are focused on getting approved and getting the keys.
The mechanics are similar, but the outcome can feel very different.
If one partner dies while buying with the First Home Scheme:
So again, the mortgage is gone — but the scheme doesn’t disappear.
For couples, the difference is usually practical rather than technical. There’s still a household, still an income, and often more flexibility around when or whether the First Home Scheme equity is bought out.
But the underlying point is the same: mortgage protection clears the loan, not the shared ownership.
This is where separate life insurance, rather than mortgage protection, can quietly make a big difference.
Life insurance is paid to the estate or a named beneficiary. It isn’t assigned to the bank and it doesn’t disappear clearing a loan.
That money can be used however it’s needed — including buying out the First Home Scheme equity or avoiding a forced sale at the wrong time.
It isn’t a requirement. But where shared equity is involved, it can turn a neat technical solution into something that actually works in real life.
We often hear some version of:
“Once the mortgage is cleared, the house is sorted.”
With shared equity, that’s not always true.
The problem usually isn’t breaking a rule. It’s misunderstanding what the rules actually do — and don’t do.
Before contracts are signed, it’s worth pausing to check a few things:
This doesn’t have to be expensive or complicated. It just needs to be done in the right order.
If you’re buying using the First Home Scheme and want to be confident your protection does what you think it does, the safest time to review it is before drawdown — not after contracts are signed.
If you’d like us to take a look, please complete this questionnaire.
Thanks for reading
Nick

Written by Nick McGowan, QFA RPA APA
Nick is a qualified financial advisor and founder of Lion.ie, an independent Irish life insurance and income protection brokerage based in Tullamore.
He’s been helping people get fair, transparent cover for over 15 years and was named Protection Broker of the Year 2022.
If you’d like straight answers without the sales pitch, learn more about Nick here.
As Ireland's leading life insurance broker, we specialise in comparing the rates and policies from the top five Irish life insurance providers and offering the very best value quotes to suit the individual needs of our clients. Our expertise lies in finding a suitable insurance plan for those with specific needs, be it a particular illness, occupation or claim history, we've got you covered in every sense!
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