Remortgage and save £3,000 a year


Updated on 12 November 2014 | 1 Comment

If you're sitting on your lender's standard variable rate you could save thousands by remortgaging.

Millions of mortgage borrowers could save thousands of pounds a year by remortgaging from their lender’s standard variable rate (SVR), according to new research.

The study by HSBC revealed that a whopping 4.3 million mortgage borrowers – over a third (39%) of the total mortgage market – are currently sat on their lender’s SVR. This is the rate you move onto when you come to the end of a fixed rate or tracker period. And it’s a rate that can be increased at any time, irrespective of what happens with Bank Base Rate.

The average SVR right now is a significant 4.99%.

But so long as you have at least 10% equity, moving to a new deal, and potentially saving thousands, should be within your reach.

HSBC gives an example of a borrower with a 90% loan-to-value mortgage on a property worth £246,600. By moving from an SVR of 4.99% to a two-year discount rate of 2.89%, they would save £3,420 in interest payments each year!

So if you’re on your lender’s SVR and fancy cutting your mortgage payments, let’s take a look at the best remortgage deals around at the moment.

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Two-year fixed rates

Two-year fixed rate mortgages have never been cheaper, according to financial data provider Moneyfacts, with the average rate now sat at just 3.28%. But the leading remortgage deals come with even more enticing rates, as the table below demonstrates.

Remember, these are just the lowest interest rates on offer; depending on the size of your mortgage it may work out cheaper to go for a slightly higher rate but a smaller mortgage fee.

Lender

LTV

Interest rate

Mortgage fee

How to apply

Chelsea Building Society

65%

1.44%

£1,675

Apply here

Tesco Bank

75%

1.79%

£1,495

Apply here

Platform

80%

2.24%

£999

Available through mortgage brokers

Post Office

90%

2.95%

£995

Apply here

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Five-year fixed rates

With mortgage rates so low, it can make sense to fix your rate for longer. Not only do you have certainty about your monthly payments for longer, but you also avoid the cost of regularly remortgaging. However, that added certainty does come at a premium.

Lender

LTV

Interest rate

Mortgage fee

How to apply

Post Office

60%

2.68%

£995

Apply here

Leeds Building Society

75%

2.89%

£799

Go to our mortgage centre

Leeds Building Society

80%

2.99%

£999

Go to our mortgage centre

Post Office

90%

4.09%

£995

Apply here

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Two-year tracker

While fixed rates are enormously popular at the moment, the cheapest rates are actually found on tracker mortgages. Remember that this is a gamble though – if and when Bank Base Rate begins to rise, your rate and mortgage repayments will too.

Lender

LTV

Interest rate

Mortgage fee

How to apply

TSB

60%

1.39% (Bank Base Rate plus 0.89%)

£2,260

Call 0808 274 3071

Nationwide

70%

1.44% (Bank Base Rate plus 0.94%)

£999

Apply here

Nationwide

80%

1.94% (Bank Base Rate plus 1.44%)

£999

Apply here

Hinckley & Rugby Building Society

90%

3.69% (Bank Base Rate plus 3.19%)

£990

Go to our mortgage centre

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Two-year discounted variable

The rates on offer from discounted variable mortgages are entirely at the mercy of the mortgage lender. They operate on a discount from the lender’s SVR but, as we’ve already highlighted, that SVR can be changed at any time. So while the rates look attractive, they are a risky choice.

Lender

LTV

Interest rate

Mortgage fee

How to apply

HSBC

60%

0.99% (2.95% discount from lender’s SVR)

£1,999

Call 0808 115 8734

Principality Building Society

75%

1.65% (3.34% discount from lender’s SVR)

£994

Apply in branch

Hinckley & Rugby Building Society

80%

1.85% (3.79% discount from lender’s SVR)

£999

Go to our mortgage centre

Leek United Building Society

90%

2.49% (2.7% discount from lender’s SVR)

£199

Apply in branch

This article aims to give information, not advice. Always do your own research and/or seek out advice from a regulated broker before acting on anything contained in this article.

Your home or property may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage.

Compare mortgages with lovemoney.com

More on mortgages:

Fixed mortgage rates keep tumbling

What's my standard variable rate?

How to remortgage

How much will your mortgage cost?

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