Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption Lenders are asking for significant deposits for all types of homes

Many first-time buyers must save the equivalent of more than a year's salary to be able to afford a deposit for a home, the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) has said.

The typical deposit stood at £12,700 at the start of 2007, but rose to £31,500 by the second half of 2010.

The figures were released as housing and lending bodies faced government calls to help first-time buyers.

However, the actual lenders themselves were not invited to the meeting.

Housing minister Grant Shapps summoned various parties to "frank and open" discussions on difficulties facing first-time buyers.

The government estimates 1.4 million households want to own their own home, but face a mortgage squeeze.

Slow recovery

Mr Shapps used the meeting to discuss options such as creating new products specifically aimed at helping people get on the property ladder, as well as shared ownership or specialist insurance for lenders.

The CML and the Building Societies Association - which represent lenders - attended the summit along with watchdogs and regulators.

'Lenders were right to be careful' Nearly three years ago, Adam Gannon, of Bolton, e-mailed the BBC to express how difficult it was to get a mortgage. He had been saving for a year. After buying his first home a year ago, his views have changed slightly. "Saving up initially was the hardest part," he said. "But they [lenders] were right to be careful. They got themselves into a difficult situation in the first place because of what they lent out."

Mr Shapps said that he wanted members of the industry talking between themselves, but not to return to reckless lending levels.

"I do not want to see the current generation completely locked out of the market," he said.

"The pendulum has swung too far the other way, where even if you have a good salary and save to get a deposit, you still cannot get a deposit.

"We want to do more to help aspiring first-time buyers - the average age of the first-time buyer with no support from their family is now 37, and there are 1.4 million households who aspire to own a home but are simply unable to do so because of house prices and mortgage availability."

However, the CML questioned the minister's figures, saying that the typical age of a first-time buyer who did not receive help from relatives was 31.

The lenders' group said that funding problems for lenders and stricter regulations - which required lenders to hold more capital for lending to "riskier" borrowers - meant that things could not change quickly.

"First-time buyer numbers will only recover slowly over time, and may take several years to approach the annual rate of 400,000 to 500,000 purchases that we have seen historically," the CML said.

"A range of initiatives - including shared ownership, product innovation and mortgage insurance - could all potentially play a part, but none is likely to be a magic bullet that restores normality to the mortgage market, for first-time buyers or anyone else.

"This is likely to be a gradual process as confidence in funding markets and lending decisions is restored."

The Building Societies Association told the minister that any new schemes needed to be run alongside a faster housebuilding programme.

'Help'

Extra help cannot come soon enough for Nick and Marie Smith. They had been renting a home for four years, while saving for a deposit.

Image caption Nick and Marie Smith have been trying to save up for a deposit

The couple, who have two young children, realised that to raise enough money they needed to move in with Mr Smith's mother in Wiltshire.

"It cannot be for ever. I would be nice to be together in our own home," said Mrs Smith.

They were keen for Mr Shapps to demand that lenders loosen their lending criteria.

"They have got to do something about this level of deposit. It is just ridiculous. Nobody can save that level of deposit," Mr Smith, 32, said.

"It does not just affect first-time buyers, it affects everyone up the chain. He [Mr Shapps] really needs to get something going and improve their lending.

"The banks should be working for us, not the other way around."

Separate research from housing website Rightmove found that 23% of people who planned to buy a property in the coming year would be first-time buyers.

Generally, it is thought that double this proportion of first-time buyers is a sign of a healthy housing market.

Trends

Figures show a downward trend in first-time buyer numbers throughout 2010.

There was a sharp fall at the end of the year, according to the British Bankers' Association (BBA), although this was skewed by the rush to beat the end of the stamp duty holiday at the end of 2009.

First-time buyers are regarded as crucial to any housing revival, but many have only been able to get onto the ladder with financial assistance from relatives. Some 84% of those aged under 30 required such assistance, the CML said.

The average deposit required when buying a property was 23% in December, according to the BBA, up from 21% the previous month.

This has been partly the result of strict lending criteria from mortgage providers - including turning down potential borrowers with any blot on their credit history.