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Avoid these expensive mortgages


Updated on 26 April 2011 | 4 Comments

Some borrowers pay a very high price to fix their mortgage rate. Is it worth it?

Clearly some homeowners or homebuyers are desperate or ill informed.

I've been casting my eye over the mortgage market to identify some of the pricier mortgage deals on the market today, and found some positively eye-watering rates on offer from some of the nation's most familiar lenders.

Take a look at what some of the most expensive mortgages cost:

Mortgage

Interest rate

Monthly payment

Arrangement fee

BM Solutions Mainstream 5-year fix

7.4%

£1,000

£1,000

Lloyds TSB 2-year fix

6.8%

£950

£1,000

Cheltenham & Gloucester 2-year fix

6.5%

£920

£1,000

*Average cost during each year of the deal, including all mortgage fees and charges. I have assumed the arrangement fee is added to the mortgage.

Data from the providers' websites. 99s are rounded.

The above are based on a £160,000 property with a loan-to-value of 85% (which means a deposit or equity of 15%). They may not be the absolute most expensive mortgages around, but they are certainly the most expensive that I could find.

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The cheapest of these pricey mortgages is almost 6% above the Bank of England's base rate, an extraordinary margin. I hope that not too many borrowers feel they have to buy these mortgages.

Now, we're not talking here about mortgages for people with bad debts and 17 credit cards. These are available to those with no other debts and no bad marks on their credit record.

I don't know who buys those mortgages, but perhaps it's people who don't think 6% to 7% sounds all that high. If you agree with them and think those don't seem like expensive interest rates, take a look at the following table:

Cheap mortgages

Mortgage

How much cheaper than most expensive mortgages?

Interest rate

Monthly payment

Arrangement fee

Norwich & Peterborough 2-year discount variable

£3,800pa to £4,100pa

2.6%

£620

£1,000

Yorkshire Building Society 2-year tracker

£2,900pa to £3,200pa

3%

£650

£1,800

HSBC special lifetime tracker

£3,200pa to £3,500pa

4%

£720

£0

Post Office 2-year fix

£2,300pa to £2,600pa

4.3%

£750

£1,000

Yorkshire Building Society 5-year fix

£1,700pa to £2,000pa

5.3%

£820

£300

The best tracker and discount mortgages, in the top half of this table, are far cheaper than in our most expensive mortgages table. We are talking hundreds of pounds per month, or thousands per year. You can get lifetime trackers, represented in this table by the best lifetime tracker from HSBC, that have no penalty for leaving and charge no fees, giving you the flexibility to fix when you feel the time is ripe. Yet it is more than £3,000 cheaper per year than the most expensive deals I found.

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You can also see from the bottom half of my table that you can fix up to a full five years at a far lower cost than with the most expensive mortgages, which were fixed for just two years at a far higher price. That's a higher price for far less safety.

The biggest difference in price is between Norwich & Peterborough's two-year discount variable deal and BM's Mainstream 2-year fix. By overpaying the difference of £4,100 a year for just two years, you can expect to save at least £3,000 in interest payments over the course of the mortgage. If you reduce the mortgage length to reflect the extra payments you've made, you could save a lot more.

Each of the lenders I mentioned in the first table also have far better products, but if a lender wants to saddle you with a product like those, look elsewhere.

It may also be worth speaking to a mortgage broker, who can give you a good idea of the best mortgages you currently qualify for, including some that may not be accessible to you direct. Why not pick the brains of our fee-free mortgage team over at our mortgage centre. The team is available to chat via instant messenger, email or over the phone.

Best buy mortgages

Mortgage

Interest rate

Monthly payment

Arrangement fee

Loan to value

Yorkshire Building Society 5-year fix

4.4%

£630

£300

75%

Yorkshire Building Society 5-year fix

5.1%

£670

£1,300

85%

Barnsley Building Society 5-year fix

5.3%

£680

£250

85%

Yorkshire Building Society 10-year fix

5%

£670

£1,300

75%

Leeds Building Society 10-year fixed mortgage

6%

£730

£0

80%

HSBC lifetime tracker special

2.4%

£520

£0

60%

first direct lifetime tracker

2.5%

£530

£200

65%

ING Direct lifetime tracker

2.8%

£550

£750

75%

HSBC lifetime tracker

4%

£610

£0

85%

More: Compare mortgages through lovemoney.com | Ten steps to finding a mortgage | Save money with a tracker mortgage

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Comments



  • 13 May 2011

    Well when my 5 year mortgage is up I might try the YBS but until it is there is really no point!

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  • 26 April 2011

    Well, they are ill-informed if they read your blog Neil!! Firstly, how can you compare a 5-year fixed rate with a 2-year tracker - apples and pears come to mind! Secondly, your information is incorrect, the BM Solutions product (5yr Fixed, they don't do a 2yr) is available for people with a degree of bad credit history i.e. limited mortgage arrears and CCJs. These types of products will always carry a higher rate due to the added risk to the lender and it is quite refreshing to see that some lenders are willing to look at this scenario. The Yorkshire product, which is the only one that is a direct comparable (which actually has an arrangement fee of £300 plus a booking fee of £195), will allow some degree of defaults/CCJs but is not quite so generous as BM Solutions. Whether it warrants the extra 2% rate is down to the customer to judge, but it is people in these unfortunate circumstances that this product could be for, rather than the mass market. As for the other two products, essentially from the same lender, Lloyds TSB and Cheltenham & Gloucester, they are actually 90% products, so will lend more than the comparable Post Office product - although not the best 90% products on the market, they are also not the worst. But if we are going to compare like-for-like, C&G's 85% products actually start from 4.73% - not quite as good as the Post Office, but not bad from a high street lender. It seems strange that these are the most expensive mortgages you could find, I've just had a quick look and 8.59% fixed for 2 years from Dunfermline would seem to be higher (albeit only available in Scotland) Equally, the tracker rates you mention aren't the lowest on the market and as mentioned earlier can't really be compared with fixed rate mortgages - it seems strange that your last post was all about fixing and keeping away from tracker rates, while this blog seems to imply the opposite!

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  • 26 April 2011

    Personally I think a 5 year fixed capital payment mortgage is probably the safest option.

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