Mortgage UK Personal Finance
9 minute read · Updated May 2026 — includes 30 April BoE decision
A friend of mine is remortgaging in two months. His current deal ends in June and he is doing what most people do in that situation — obsessively watching the news, reading rate forecasts that contradict each other, and getting increasingly anxious about whether to fix or track. He called me after the Bank of England's decision on 30 April and asked what it meant for him. The honest answer is: it made things clearer, but not simple.
The MPC voted 8-1 to hold the base rate at 3.75%. The lone dissenter was chief economist Huw Pill, who voted for an immediate hike to 4%. Governor Andrew Bailey made clear in his statement that the Middle East conflict represents a genuine supply shock — pushing energy and fuel costs higher — and that if the conflict continues or escalates, the Bank will need to respond to the resulting inflation. UK CPI has already ticked up to 3.3% in March from 3% the month before, driven largely by higher fuel prices. The Bank cannot cut its way out of an energy supply shock the same way it could respond to weak demand. That is the uncomfortable truth sitting behind the hold decision.
This article is the conversation I had with my friend, written out properly. Not a prediction of where rates are going — nobody knows that, and the Bank itself published three separate economic scenarios rather than one forecast. But a clear framework for thinking through the decision based on your actual circumstances, with the latest numbers on the table.
The headline was a hold — but the detail matters more than the headline. The 8-1 vote, with Huw Pill dissenting in favour of a hike, signals that the Monetary Policy Committee is genuinely divided about what comes next. The majority wanted to wait and see how the energy shock plays out. One member thought the inflation risk was already serious enough to act.
Bailey's statement was notably cautious. He drew a parallel with the 2022 energy shock but stressed this one is different in three important ways: the price rise has so far been smaller, monetary policy started from a more restrictive position, and the labour market is weaker. The implication is that the Bank has more room to absorb the shock without hiking — but that room is not unlimited. If conflict continues and energy prices keep rising, the calculation changes.
Markets have shifted from pricing in cuts to pricing in either a hold or a single hike in 2026. The pre-conflict expectation of two cuts this year has been almost entirely abandoned. For mortgage borrowers, this means the window in which tracker mortgages were expected to become significantly cheaper has closed — at least for now. The question is no longer "when will my tracker rate fall?" but "will my tracker rate stay flat, or rise?"
As of 30 April 2026, with the base rate confirmed at 3.75%, here is the current mortgage rate picture. Fixed rates spiked sharply in March as the conflict escalated, and have been gradually easing as markets calm — but remain significantly higher than pre-conflict levels:
| Mortgage type | Average rate (30 April 2026) | Best available (60% LTV) | Pre-conflict (March) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2-year fixed | 5.84% | ~4.45% (HSBC) | 4.83% |
| 5-year fixed | 5.70% | ~4.35% | 4.95% |
| Tracker (base + margin) | Base + 0.5–1% | ~3.95–4.55% | Similar |
| Standard variable rate | ~7.13% | — | — |
The key numbers: fixed rates are meaningfully higher than before the conflict began, while tracker rates — which move with the base rate — have stayed more stable. That gap has narrowed the case for fixing on pure rate grounds, but widened the uncertainty risk of tracking. The SVR column is a reminder of why doing nothing when your deal ends is the most expensive option available.
A fixed rate mortgage locks your interest rate for a set period — typically 2, 3 or 5 years. Whatever happens to the Bank of England base rate, your monthly payment stays the same. If rates spike to 5.5% next year, you are still paying your locked-in rate. If rates fall to 2.5%, you are still paying your locked-in rate.
The certainty is the point. For most borrowers this is not primarily a financial optimisation exercise — it is a budgeting and peace of mind exercise. Knowing your mortgage payment to the penny for the next five years means you can plan around it. For people with tight monthly budgets, young families managing childcare costs, or anyone whose financial situation would be genuinely strained by a £200–£300 increase in monthly payments, that certainty has real value that does not show up in a rate comparison table.
The cost of that certainty is an early repayment charge (ERC) if you want to exit the fix before the term ends. Typical ERCs are 1–5% of the outstanding mortgage balance in the early years, stepping down toward zero as you approach the end of the fixed period. On a £300,000 mortgage with a 3% ERC, that is a £9,000 exit penalty. It is not insurmountable, but it does meaningfully reduce your flexibility — you cannot easily switch deals if rates fall sharply, or sell and move without carrying the cost.
A tracker mortgage sets your rate as a fixed margin above the Bank of England base rate — something like "base rate + 0.75%". As the base rate moves, your rate and monthly payment move with it automatically. No decision required, no remortgage process — it just changes.
Right now, with the base rate at 3.75%, a tracker at base + 0.75% gives you 4.5%. If the Bank cuts rates to 3.25%, your rate drops to 4%. If the Bank hikes to 4.25%, your rate rises to 5%.
The flexibility is the key advantage. Most tracker mortgages allow you to overpay without penalty and many allow you to exit without an ERC, or with a much smaller one than a fixed rate. If rates fall significantly and a better fixed deal becomes available, you can switch. If you need to sell and move, you are not carrying a large exit penalty. That optionality has genuine financial value, particularly in an uncertain rate environment.
The cost of that flexibility is uncertainty. Your monthly payment can rise. In the current environment — with some economists warning of potential rate hikes before year end — that is not a trivial risk. A move from 3.75% to 4.25% on the base rate adds roughly £65–£80 per month on a £250,000 mortgage. A move to 5% would add considerably more. If your budget cannot comfortably absorb that, the tracker's flexibility is cold comfort.
Here is the honest thing that most rate comparison articles do not say clearly enough: nobody knows where rates are going. Not the Bank of England — which published three separate economic scenarios rather than a single forecast on 30 April. Not the economists. Not the mortgage brokers. The MPC itself is split 8-1, and the one dissenter wanted to hike right now.
The three BoE scenarios range from a short-lived energy shock where cuts eventually resume, to a prolonged conflict scenario where inflation stays elevated and rates need to rise. The Bank cannot tell you which one will play out — it depends on geopolitical events that nobody controls or predicts reliably. Given that uncertainty, the right question is not "which rate type will be cheaper?" but "which rate type can I actually live with?"
Mark is remortgaging £285,000 in June 2026. He has a 35% equity stake, so he qualifies for competitive rates. His household income is comfortable but not lavish — he and his partner have two young children and childcare costs are significant for another two years.
The tracker option: base + 0.6% = 4.35% now, monthly payment ~£1,420
The 5-year fix option: 4.55%, monthly payment ~£1,445
The difference today is £25 per month. The tracker is cheaper now. But if the base rate rises to 4.25%, Mark's tracker payment goes to ~£1,535 — £115 more per month than the fix. With two children in nursery, that £115 matters.
Mark chose the 5-year fix. Not because he thinks rates will rise — he genuinely does not know — but because he does not want to be checking the Bank of England's announcements every six weeks for the next five years. The certainty is worth £25 per month to him.
On a £250,000 repayment mortgage over 25 years, here is what different rate paths mean for monthly payments on a tracker at base + 0.75% versus a 5-year fix at 4.5%:
| Base rate scenario | Tracker payment | 5-year fix payment | Monthly difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Base stays at 3.75% | ~£1,369 | ~£1,389 | Fix costs £20 more |
| Base cuts to 3.25% | ~£1,334 | ~£1,389 | Fix costs £55 more |
| Base cuts to 2.75% | ~£1,299 | ~£1,389 | Fix costs £90 more |
| Base rises to 4.25% | ~£1,404 | ~£1,389 | Tracker costs £15 more |
| Base rises to 5.00% | ~£1,472 | ~£1,389 | Tracker costs £83 more |
The tracker wins financially in every scenario where rates fall or stay flat. The fix wins financially only if rates rise — and rises meaningfully above current levels. The question is which scenario you think is more likely and whether you can afford the downside if you are wrong.
There is a third option that often gets lost in the fixed vs tracker debate: fixing for a shorter period. A 2-year fix at around 4.64% (best available in April 2026) versus a 5-year fix at around 4.35% means paying slightly more now for the ability to remortgage sooner if rates fall.
The logic: if you believe rates will fall significantly within two years — which was the consensus before geopolitical uncertainty muddied the picture — a 2-year fix captures most of the certainty benefit while allowing you to refinance onto a lower rate in 2028. If rates do not fall, you remortgage in 2028 at whatever the prevailing rate is, having paid a slightly higher rate in the meantime.
The 5-year fix makes more sense if you believe rate uncertainty will persist for several years, want to lock in before any further rises, or simply do not want to go through the remortgage process again in two years. For most people in stable employment who are not planning to move, a 5-year fix removes the decision for long enough to be genuinely restful.
The Bank held at 3.75% on 30 April but the 8-1 vote with a hawkish dissent tells you the direction of risk. Cuts are off the table in the near term. A hike is possible if the Middle East conflict drives sustained energy price rises. UK inflation is already ticking up to 3.3%. In that environment, the case for a tracker depends heavily on your financial resilience — if rates rise to 4.25% or 4.5%, can your budget absorb the higher payments without stress? If yes, a tracker with no ERC keeps your options open. If no, a 5-year fix removes the uncertainty for long enough to matter. The worst outcome remains the same as it always was: falling onto your lender's SVR at 7.13% while you deliberate. Whatever you decide, act now.
Once you have sorted your rate, the free calculator can show you how much interest you would save by overpaying — and whether that money would work harder in a pension or ISA instead.
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