Darlington Building Society was set up in 1856 and was there to serve the needs
of Darlington and its surrounding areas and now has grown in to the leading mutual
provider of mortgages in the areas of County Durham, North Yorkshire and the Tees
Valley. You should consider
Darlington Mortgage if you are seeking a fixed rate,
discount rate, cashback or SVR (standard variable rate) mortgage.
Click here for a list of the current
Darlington Building Society Mortgage offers.
To get advice & no obligation quotes on mortgages being offered by Darlington Building Society, fill out the form below to contact an impartial mortgage advisor. You can also receive quotes from other lenders and get expert advice on mortgages & remortgaging at the same time...
THINK CAREFULLY BEFORE SECURING OTHER DEBTS AGAINST YOUR HOME. YOUR HOME MAY BE REPOSSESSED IF YOU DO NOT KEEP UP REPAYMENTS ON A MORTGAGE OR ANY OTHER DEBT SECURED ON IT
By submitting this form you are consenting to your information being passed to an associate of Okoza who may contact you. This information may be used by us or selected partners to advise you of other useful products or services that we feel you would be interested in. Our service is free to you but to operate this service we receive fees from the lenders or brokers we refer you to. There may be a fee for mortgage advice. The adviser is obliged to disclose to you the fee before providing the advice and the precise amount will depend upon your circumstances. We estimate that a typical fee will be 1% of the sum you borrow..
Darlington Building Society, as a mutual organisation, has no outside shareholders
to pay dividends to so it can use its profits over time to benefit its build up
capital strength for the protection of members' funds and develop new products and
services.
As the Darlington Working Men's Equitable Permanent Building Society, it was formed
to benefit the local community and remains a mutual independent building society.
It is still owned by its members and means they are fully accountable to them, and
don't have shareholders to satisfy and some would argue this gets a much better
deal for its members. As an example instead of paying dividends they can return
profits to their members in the form of better savings and mortgage rates.