The sneaky mortgage rate that may cost you £££
In the old days lenders had one standard variable rate each. But not any more. So which one will you have to pay?
Standard variable rates or SVRs used to be simple. The SVR is a mortgage lender’s basic lending rate. Typically the SVR is the rate a borrower moves to when a fixed or other tied-in deal comes to an end.
And although lenders can set the SVR at any level they choose and change it whenever the mood takes them, the rate generally moves in line with the base rate.
Historically paying the SVR meant you were paying a higher-than-necessary rate for your mortgage, but since the base rate fell to 0.5% more than two-and-a-half years ago, the SVR can be a competitive rate in many cases.
However, some mortgage lenders are baffling borrowers by having more than one SVR; typically one for existing borrowers and one for new customers.
New vs existing borrowers
Nationwide Building Society introduced a two-tier SVR system back in April 2009. Up until then it had a guarantee in place that promised its “base mortgage rate” (BMR) would never be more than 2% above the base rate. When the base rate fell to 0.5% in March 2009 borrowers on Nationwide’s BMR paid just 2.5% interest and have been on to a winner ever since as the base rate stayed put.
But borrowers who took out a mortgage with the building society after April 2009 have not been so lucky. When their deals end they’re moved to Nationwide’s standard variable rate, which doesn’t come with any promises and is currently 3.99%.
For a borrower with a mortgage of £150,000 this would mean repayments would be about £118 more each month than if Nationwide still offered the BMR of 2.5%.
Nationwide justifies the two-tier system by saying it needs to balance the needs of both savers and borrowers; if it doesn’t rake in cash from mortgage borrowers then it can’t offer decent savings rates.
Lloyds has a similar two-tier system. Up until June 2010 the bank promised that the SVR would never be more than 2% above base. So existing customers who took out mortgages before that could revert to an SVR of 2.5% if the base rate stayed at 0.5%.
But since June last year the go-to rate at the end of a fixed or other tied-in deal changed to the “Homeowner Variable Rate” which currently stands at 3.99% and doesn’t come with any promises.
Buy-to-let
To make things more complicated still, Lloyds also has a “Buy-To-Let Variable Rate” which currently stands at 4.84%, almost double Lloyds’ cheapest SVR. Again, this came into effect in June 2010 – landlords with mortgages taken out before this date can still revert to the SVR of 2.5%.
Clydesdale Bank also has a different go-to rate for residential customers and buy-to-let customers. Residential deals revert to a variable rate which currently stands at 4.49% but buy-to-let borrowers pay 0.5% more at 4.99%.
Nottingham Building Society has different variable rates for landlords too. Most mainstream deals revert to the building society’s variable mortgage rate of 6.14% - the highest on the market - while buy-to-let borrowers pay a hefty 6.54% on the buy-to-let variable mortgage rate.
Should you pay the SVR?
The average SVR currently stands at 4.8%, considerably higher than the best buy mortgage deals available at the moment. So should you switch if you’re paying your lender’s SVR?
In most cases switching away from a SVR will be penalty-free. If you do have to pay early redemption charges, these are likely to wipe out any savings you make.
As a general rule anyone paying a SVR of 3.5% or over will benefit from switching mortgages but they’ll need at least 15% equity in their home to be eligible for the most competitive mortgages available.
Borrowers on an SVR of 2.5% with Nationwide or Lloyds should stay put until a rate rise looks imminent – which might not be until 2014 according to some pundits.
When switching it’s important to take any arrangement fees into account when working out the total cost of a new mortgage compared to your current deal.
Top fixed rates for remortgagors
Here is a selection of the current best buys for fixed rate mortgages:
Lender |
Length of fix |
Rate |
Arrangement Fee |
Maximum loan-to-value |
Two years |
2.48% |
£800 |
50% |
|
Two years |
2.67% |
£995 |
70% |
|
Three years |
2.89% |
£900 |
70% |
|
Two years |
3.24% |
£800 |
80% |
|
Three years |
3.24% |
£900 |
75% |
More: The two banks that may be secretly spying on you | Average house price to hit £200,000 by 2015
At lovemoney.com, you can research all the best deals yourself using our online mortgage service, or speak directly to a whole-of-market, fee-free lovemoney.com broker. Call 0800 804 8045 or email mortgages@lovemoney.com for more help.
This article aims to give information, not advice. Always do your own research and/or seek out advice from an FSA-regulated broker (such as one of our brokers here at lovemoney.com), before acting on anything contained in this article.
Finally, we tend to only give the initial rate of a deal in our articles, but any deal which lasts for a shorter period than your mortgage term may revert to the lender's standard variable rate or a tracker rate when the deal ends. Before you take out a deal, you should always try to find out from your lender what its standard variable rate is and how it will be determined in the future. Make sure you take all this information into account when comparing different deals.
Your home or property may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage.
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