Mortgage Payments Set To Jump By £500 For One Million Households
Mortgage payments will rise by at least £500 a month for nearly one million households by the end of 2026, the Bank of England has said.
Households and firms have been under pressure as interest rates have risen in a bid to lower high inflation.
In a report, the Bank said mortgage holders "may struggle with repayments" on loans.
But it said lenders are strong enough to withstand a rise in customers defaulting on repayments.
The Bank has raised interest rates from 0.1% in December 2021 to 5% to curb rising prices.
Expectations that borrowing costs might rise even further has pushed up mortgage rates. On Wednesday, the average rate on a two-year fixed mortgage hit a fresh 15 year high of 6.7%, according to Moneyfacts, the financial information service.
The Bank of England said in its twice-yearly Financial Stability Report that as fixed-rate mortgage deals expire and people renew their loans, mortgage repayments will go up.
More than two million households will pay between £200 and £499 more per month over the next three and a half years, it warned.
A further one million mortgage holders will see their monthly payments rise by at least £500.
In the shorter term, the average household coming off a fixed rate deal in the second half of 2023 will have to pay about £220 more a month if they refinanced at current rates.
Craig Johnston, 38, from Sheffield, told BBC News that his mortgage would effectively double from £679 per month in 2021 to £1,209 from the end of September.
It means he will have to make sacrifices "across the board" in terms of what he can spend - and what he can save.
"It's not great," Mr Johnston. "I'm not particularly happy about it at all. I'd rather the money be in my pocket rather than someone else's pocket."
He said he was unsure how raising rates is helping people.
"For all of us - homeowners, taxpayers, people paying rent - I just don't see how it's going to be better," he said, adding: "It just seems to be like 'put the interest rates up and we'll see what happens'. I don't get the logic."
Raising rates
Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said in June that the Bank has "no alternative" but to raise rates.
But the Labour party's Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves said the high mortgage repayments demonstrate "the painful hit on families from the Tory mortgage bombshell".
The theory behind raising interest rates is that by making it more expensive for people to borrow, people end up spending less. If they buy fewer things, the rate of rising prices should slow.
However, the Bank has been criticised for not acting quickly enough to bring inflation under control.
Most mortgages taken out in recent years have been at a fixed rate of two or five years which means there is a lag in terms of when recent rate rises will hit households.
About 4.5 million homes have had to pay more in mortgage repayments since late 2021, and higher rates will hit the vast majority of the rest by the end of 2026.
Higher rates mean households and firms cut back on spending, "worsening the economic environment, and increases the risk that they will default on loans", the Bank said.
However, banks have to support households having difficulty with repayments, reducing the risk of defaults, the bank said.
Stricter lending rules since 2014 have also helped by limiting the amount of mortgage debt, the Bank said.
Andrew Bailey, Governor of the Bank of England, said a "much stronger" employment market was "helping a lot in terms of the stress that households are seeing".
The rate of UK unemployment has ticked higher but at 4% remains relatively low.
But he added that wage rises, which are linked to a strong labour market, are helping to keep inflation high.
The Bank of England said that "although the proportion of income that UK households overall spend on mortgage payments is expected to rise", it expects it to remain below peaks seen during the global financial crisis and in the early 1990s.
It added: "UK banks are in a strong position to support customers who are facing payment difficulties. This should mean lower defaults than in previous periods in which borrowers have been under pressure."
It said that, so far, the UK has been "resilient" to rapidly rising interest rates.
The Bank of England's report also showed the result of a "stress test" on the UK's eight biggest banks and building societies to see if they could withstand catastrophic economic conditions.
These include house prices falling by 31%, the unemployment rate increasing to 8.5% and inflation rising to 17%.
The banks and building societies that have been tested include: Barclays, Lloyds, HSBC, NatWest, Santander UK, Standard Chartered, Nationwide Building Society and Virgin Money.
How is your mortgage affected by rising interest rates? How are rising mortgage costs changing how you live your life? You can share your experiences by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.
Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also get in touch in the following ways:
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What should I do if I miss a mortgage payment?
- A shortfall equivalent to two or more months' repayments means you are officially in arrears
- Your lender must then treat you fairly by considering any requests about changing how you pay, perhaps with lower repayments for a short period
- Any arrangement you come to will be reflected on your credit file - affecting your ability to borrow money in the future
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