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April,26,2026
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Home»Mortgage»Why are lenders increasing UK mortgage rates?
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Why are lenders increasing UK mortgage rates?

April 30, 20245 Mins Read


Homeowners and prospective buyers have been hit this week by further increases to mortgage rates.

Some of the UK’s biggest lenders, including NatWest, Santander and Nationwide, followed in the footsteps of their competitors and hiked rates on two and five-year fixed deals by more than 0.2 percentage points on Monday (29 April). These products are the most popular type of mortgage deal on the market.

The slight uptick in rates since late February has already had an impact on the housing market. Nationwide’s most recent House Prices Index blamed stuttering house price growth on the change in costs, while Go.Compare research has found affordability remains an issue – particularly in southern parts of England.

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At least some of the blame lies with the 16-year high Bank of England interest rate. Swap rates, which are highly sensitive to any market uncertainty, soared earlier this month when the monthly average wage growth and headline inflation datasets came in hotter than expected.

It was feared both economic indicators would mean the UK central bank would opt to delay cuts to the base rate in a bid to ensure consumer price inflation gets back to its 2% target. But is the Bank of England entirely to blame for the rise in mortgage rates we’re currently seeing?

How much have mortgage rates risen?

According to rate comparison website Moneyfacts, average rates sat at 5.9% for a two-year fix and 5.48% for a five-year deal as of Tuesday (30 April). It means rates have crept up by almost half a percentage point over the last two months.

Rates had been trending downwards in January and February ahead of expected bank rate cuts. While the gradual change of direction and the number of lenders upping their rates has created a bit of panic, especially for the 1.5 million households who will have to remortgage at some point in 2024, there is an important caveat to note.