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Mortgages - how long would you fix for right now?

44 replies

CouldIBeAnymoreOuting · 21/03/2024 18:37

People who are remortgaging over the next couple of months, how long are you fixing for?

Our offerings are 5yrs fixed at 4.54%, 2yrs at 4.7%, and 1yr at 4.9%

We were on a very low rate and our monthly repayment will be going up by £700-800. Not keen on paying that for 5 yrs, but if rates go up further our affordability will be very very tight.

The 1yr is tempting as feels relatively low risk if we can negotiate a new rate (possibly lower or at least similar to what we are being offered now) after only 6 months? …Unless rates drastically rise again within that 6 months.

A crystal ball would be handy!

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LaWench · 21/03/2024 18:39

If I had to fix now, it would be for 2yrs max and then reassess in 2yrs time. If the repayments are too costly, I would extend the term at remortgage time.

Twiglets1 · 21/03/2024 18:52

Are you being charged a fee for fixing them at these rates? Because that is something that has to be taken into account.

Mortgage rates are widely expected to fall over the next few years (though not to the ultra low rates you are currently enjoying) so I would be a bit reluctant to fix for 5 years personally.

GreatGateauxsby · 21/03/2024 18:57

I’d be going for 5 years but that’s due to my circumstances I’d want fixed outgoings and to hedge against wild card world events.

i think you also need to factor in arrangement fees so you can compare apples to apples

NorthernMouse · 21/03/2024 19:01

Depends on personal circumstances, priorities and whether you can afford to take any risk.

When the DC were small and we were stretching ourselves I fixed for 5 years. I would do that irrespective of what I thought interest rates might do. I was not in a position to take any risk during the double-nursery-fees years.

Now our mortgage is much smaller vs our income, and no nursery fees, and we may be able to make over payments, I will look to see what trackers are around.

opentoadvice88 · 21/03/2024 19:02

We’re fixing for 2 but at a horrible rate 😭

mynameiscalypso · 21/03/2024 19:03

I'd probably fix for two years given the uncertainty of a general election this year and what might happen before or after that.

Twiglets1 · 21/03/2024 19:04

Just to add @CouldIBeAnymoreOuting I have linked to an article that asks the question When will mortgage rates come down?

"In March 2024, mortgage rates on fixed rate mortgages increased in the UK after falling for several months as the prospect faded of imminent Bank of England interest rate cuts.

Financial markets are currently predicting the first cut in interest rates will be in July 2024, falling to 3.74% by the end of 2025. As a general rule: if interest rates fall, the mortgage rate forecast would be for mortgage rates to fall too".

https://hoa.org.uk/advice/guides-for-homeowners/i-am-managing-2/mortgage-rate-forecast/#:~:text=While%20it's%20not%20possible%20to,in%202027%20across%20all%20properties.

mortgage rate forecast

Mortgage Rate Forecast 2024: Will Rates Go Down?

Mortgage rates may be falling but will that trend continue? We look at the mortgage rate forecast for 2024 to see what might happen next.

https://hoa.org.uk/advice/guides-for-homeowners/i-am-managing-2/mortgage-rate-forecast#:~:text=While%20it's%20not%20possible%20to,in%202027%20across%20all%20properties.

crew2022 · 21/03/2024 19:04

I might stay in variable for now hoping they come down a bit more

Toooldtoworry · 21/03/2024 19:07

We will do 5 or 10 years when we're due early next year dependent on the difference between the rates. We're hoping to repay the mortgage in 2035 though.

CouldIBeAnymoreOuting · 21/03/2024 19:10

Twiglets1 · 21/03/2024 18:52

Are you being charged a fee for fixing them at these rates? Because that is something that has to be taken into account.

Mortgage rates are widely expected to fall over the next few years (though not to the ultra low rates you are currently enjoying) so I would be a bit reluctant to fix for 5 years personally.

So the 1 yr has no product fee and the others have a £999 fee. Makes the repayment cost of the 1yr effectively the same as the 2yr with product fee.

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CouldIBeAnymoreOuting · 21/03/2024 19:11

We are already at maximum repayment term so no option to up that.

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CousinGreg55 · 21/03/2024 19:12

crew2022 · 21/03/2024 19:04

I might stay in variable for now hoping they come down a bit more

I would do this too

Letsnotargue · 21/03/2024 19:13

We fixed for 10 years at 4%, with no early redemption fee. Not the cheapest we could have got at the time, but gives us an out if rates drop significantly.

CouldIBeAnymoreOuting · 21/03/2024 19:16

crew2022 · 21/03/2024 19:04

I might stay in variable for now hoping they come down a bit more

the SVR is 8%. We’d definitely save money with a 1 or 2 year fix unless rates drop dramatically within a few months from now.

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Femmefatality · 21/03/2024 19:17

What's your LTV?

It was possible to get sub 4% rates only a few weeks ago on LTVs under 75%...so if you can hold out a few weeks it's likely rares will start coming down

OddBoots · 21/03/2024 19:21

In that situation with no fee for it I would go for the 1 year for now.

CouldIBeAnymoreOuting · 21/03/2024 19:22

Femmefatality · 21/03/2024 19:17

What's your LTV?

It was possible to get sub 4% rates only a few weeks ago on LTVs under 75%...so if you can hold out a few weeks it's likely rares will start coming down

65% LTV, so eligible for most 75% rates and a good few years off from reaching 60% LTV. Mortgage isn’t actually up until end of May so we do have another month or so to see if anything changes with rates. Will lock in a deal now anyway, though.

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Twiglets1 · 21/03/2024 19:28

CouldIBeAnymoreOuting · 21/03/2024 19:10

So the 1 yr has no product fee and the others have a £999 fee. Makes the repayment cost of the 1yr effectively the same as the 2yr with product fee.

In that case I would opt for the 1 year with no fee as that's still a lot lower than the SVR and does give you the option to fix a new rate in 2025 when rates will hopefully be a little lower.

It does depend on your attitude to risk though as some people would prefer to know exactly what they will be paying for the next 2 or 5 years.

Toooldtoworry · 21/03/2024 19:35

What's the tracker rates looking like?

benefitstaxcredithelp · 21/03/2024 19:41

Martin Lewis predicts rates will begin to slowly come down over the next couple of years but not to the low level they have been at in recent years.
If it was me I’d fix for one year looking at your options and re-asses in 12 months in the hope they do come down a bit as predicted. Good luck 🤞

ClonedSquare · 21/03/2024 19:59

We're planning to fix for five years when we buy this year.

At our stage in life (two young children with nursery fees), a lower monthly payment is our priority. We also like the security of having fixed for 5 years just in case rates do go up again. 5 years coincides with the end of nursery fees and ability to start overpaying our mortgage or having more spare cash.

If it was just us and we had a looser budget, we'd fix for two.

caringcarer · 21/03/2024 19:59

CouldIBeAnymoreOuting · 21/03/2024 19:10

So the 1 yr has no product fee and the others have a £999 fee. Makes the repayment cost of the 1yr effectively the same as the 2yr with product fee.

In that case I'd do the 1 year and by then I suspect inflation will be down to 2 percent and B of E will finally reduce rates again. This month only 1 person voted for a 0.25 percent drop but at least 2 did not vote for an increase like the previous month.

CouldIBeAnymoreOuting · 21/03/2024 20:06

Toooldtoworry · 21/03/2024 19:35

What's the tracker rates looking like?

Tracker is 5.5% and around £300 more per month than the fixed deals. So unless we are sure rates will come down significantly before 1-2yrs time, I don’t think the tracker will save us much.

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CouldIBeAnymoreOuting · 21/03/2024 20:10

Twiglets1 · 21/03/2024 19:28

In that case I would opt for the 1 year with no fee as that's still a lot lower than the SVR and does give you the option to fix a new rate in 2025 when rates will hopefully be a little lower.

It does depend on your attitude to risk though as some people would prefer to know exactly what they will be paying for the next 2 or 5 years.

I’m leaning this way with the 1yr deal.

I’d like to know what I’m paying over the next 2-5yrs, but I also don’t want to pay the current rate for the next 5 years. Everything is going on the mortgage payments and cost of living. No holidays or savings. 5 more years of that is not ideal…but obviously neither would be a significant rate increase after a 1 or 2 year mortgage.

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Saschka · 21/03/2024 20:12

I went for 5 years, but we were offered 4.14% in the pre-Christmas mortgage price war, and didn’t think we’d get that again in a hurry. Not available now! The equivalent deal is now 4.39%.