There’s a remortgage nightmare in store for millions of UK homeowners, according to research from Hargreaves Lansdown.
Figures from a survey of 2,000 people by Opinium for Hargreaves Lansdown in May 2023 reveals that two in five people with a mortgage say their payments haven’t gone up since interest rates started rising – because so many are on fixed rate deals.
Almost half of those with a mortgage (48%) say they’d struggle if their monthly repayments rose as little as £150.
One in five say their monthly payments have already risen more than £200 in the past 18 months; while 16% of people are already struggling with their mortgage payments – rising to 21% of those aged 55 and over.
Hargreaves Lansdown head of personal finance Sarah Coles insists there’s a remortgage nightmare lying in wait for more than three million people. “They’ve been shielded from the horror of rate hikes so far by a fixed mortgage, and when their deal runs out, they face the full force of the rises in one single hit.”
“Anyone whose deal comes to an end in the coming year is set to see their monthly payments increase by an average of £192, but almost two thirds of people said this would cause them financial problems”.
The ONS calculated that 1.3 million fixed deals would come to an end in 2023, most of which were under 2%. At the moment, the average two-year fixed mortgage costs around 5.5%. If rates don’t fall back before they have to remortgage, it could spell catastrophe for hundreds of thousands of people.
Coles points out that those with large mortgages will see their payments increase the most. However, this doesn’t just include those on higher incomes who bought more expensive properties; it will also bring real pain for younger people, who bought more recently when prices were higher.
“We can see this in the rises that have already hit those aged 18-34. One in four say their monthly repayment has gone up more than £200 (24%).
“Anyone who bought after the rate hikes of the late 1980s won’t have had to deal with rises at this kind of speed before, so there’s a risk they won’t have factored it into their plans at all.
However, on the plus side, Coles says there’s every chance their mortgage company has. Affordability calculators forced banks to assess whether people could afford their mortgages if rates were to rise. If their circumstances haven’t become significantly worse in the interim, there’s a decent chance they can stretch to bigger payments.
“The trouble is that their circumstances may well have deteriorated, as wages have fallen so far behind inflation. In March, they were a full 2% behind. Any spare cash may have been eaten up by energy bills and food shopping, so there’s little left for a mortgage shock”, she says.
In March, the HL Savings & Resilience Barometer dug into just how bad financial problems could get after a remortgage. It looked at the critical moment when mortgage costs hit 25% of household income after tax, when people are considered to be at risk of defaulting on mortgage payments.
It revealed that by the end of 2023, 2 million households would be at risk. It also found that 650,000 of these people won’t have enough savings to fall back on, and 347,000 of them not only won’t have enough savings, but will already be spending more than they have coming in – putting them at critical risk.
As Coles explains there is still a chance that the market is overreacting, and rates could fall back again. However, large reductions in mortgage costs may require expectations of a Bank of England cut – and at the moment, that’s not on the cards until 2024.
Even then, they’re expected to come down far more slowly than they increased, so it could take quite some time for mortgage costs to drift significantly lower.