UK Property Financing 2025/26: The New Rules of Borrowing Capacity
Stress testing, not rates, now dictates borrowing power. Navigate the 2025/26 refinancing wave with strategies for lender segmentation and portfolio resilience.
Buy-to-let mortgage markets are shifting. Explore our analysis of current rates, lender criteria, stress testing, and the structural risks every investor should understand before borrowing.
Stress testing, not rates, now dictates borrowing power. Navigate the 2025/26 refinancing wave with strategies for lender segmentation and portfolio resilience.
A structural risk guide for UK residential property investors examining refinancing risk, liquidity constraints, yield cost drift, exit timing uncertainty, and portfolio underwriting changes that are reshaping investment outcomes.
Analysis of structural investment mistakes in UK property that accumulate quietly before becoming financially consequential, focusing on liquidity assumptions, yield erosion, and refinancing risks.
UK property market data for mid-2026 shows national resilience masking sharp regional divergence, with the North and West outperforming London and the South, rising stock levels, and affordability — not demand — identified as the primary constraint. Structural differences from 2008 reduce systemic risk but geopolitical uncertainty and potential rate hikes add near-term pressure.
UK mortgage approvals rose to a 15-month high of 65,945 in April, beating forecasts, but the positive signal is tempered by two-year fixed rates climbing to 5.68%, a 0.6% monthly house price fall in May, and weak new buyer inquiries — suggesting market momentum remains fragile.
Paragon Bank's H1 2026 results show EPC A-C properties now account for 56.4% of new BTL lending, up from 49.9% a year earlier, as landlords increasingly target energy-efficient homes ahead of the proposed 2030 minimum EPC requirements. The lender offers preferential green mortgage pricing, signalling that EPC rating is becoming a material financing variable.
Savills has revised its UK house price forecast downward, projecting a 2% fall in 2026 before a recovery to 18.5% cumulative growth by 2030, with northern regions and Wales/Scotland expected to significantly outperform London and the South East due to stronger affordability positions.
UK residential transactions dipped 3% month-on-month in April but remained 53% above the distorted April 2025 base. Industry commentators flag near-term headwinds including mortgage offer repricing, Budget uncertainty, and rising household costs as likely to suppress activity further.
The article explains how buy-to-let mortgage leverage amplifies returns and outlines the key lending constraints — ICR ratios, portfolio landlord thresholds at four properties, LTV caps, and geographic restrictions — that shape how landlords can scale portfolios. It also introduces equity recycling as a growth strategy.
Labour leadership candidates are proposing CGT alignment with income tax and new council tax levies on overseas high-value property owners, which Knight Frank warns could compound landlord exits, suppress international investment, and keep mortgage rates elevated — with prime central London already showing measurable price and transaction pressure.
Knight Frank's UK residential research head assesses a cluster of emerging policy risks — CGT alignment, council tax surcharges on high-value properties, and bond market pressures — alongside data showing prime central London transactions 18% below average and prices 22% off peak. The article signals higher-for-longer mortgage rates and potential further landlord exit triggers.
Landbay's landlord sentiment survey finds BTL confidence has stabilised at the portfolio level despite macro pessimism, with most landlords holding positions, targeting rent increases, and strongly preferring fixed-rate mortgages as refinancing activity picks up.
Tracker mortgage applications tripled in April as swap rate rises pushed fixed-rate pricing above tracker rates, with a £78/month cost differential on a £250k mortgage. The BoE's potential rate rise scenario to 5.25% by 2027 means the tracker vs fixed trade-off carries meaningful downside risk investors must model.
Average UK mortgage costs have risen by up to £348/month since geopolitical tensions drove gilt yields and fixed rates higher, with a two-year fix at 90% LTV now averaging 6.04%. The regional disparity is stark — London borrowers face three times the monthly cost increase of those in the North East.
Rising UK gilt yields — now above 5% for the first time since 2008 — driven by inflation fears and Labour political uncertainty are feeding directly into mortgage pricing, prompting Knight Frank to downgrade house price forecasts across all UK markets. Investors face a near-term decision window on whether to act before borrowing costs rise further.
Landlord purchase activity has reached its highest share since 2016 (13.3% of all residential purchases), driven predominantly by landlord-to-landlord sales as smaller investors exit under regulatory and financing pressure and larger investors consolidate in high-yield Northern markets. This is a portfolio reshuffling dynamic, not a new BTL boom.
A London investor used £1.46m bridging finance at 75% LTV to acquire a St John's Wood flat with a high ground rent, using the bridge term to serve a Section 42 notice and extend the lease — thereby broadening eligible BTL lender options for refinancing. The case illustrates how bridging can be deployed as a strategic tool to resolve leasehold lending barriers.
A London investor used a £1.46m bridging facility at 75% LTV to acquire a high ground rent leasehold apartment, using the loan term to pursue a Section 42 lease extension that will widen BTL refinancing options once resolved. The article illustrates bridging finance as a strategic tool for unlocking leasehold assets otherwise constrained by lender criteria.
UK inflation fell to 2.8% in April, prompting Halifax, HSBC and Santander to cut fixed mortgage rates, though economists warn inflation could rebound towards 4% later in 2025 due to rising energy costs and oil prices. The outlook for further Bank of England rate cuts remains uncertain but immediate rate rises appear less likely.
NHBC data shows new home registrations fell 6% in Q1 2026 to 26,959, with private sector builds down 7% and sharp regional declines in London, Northern Ireland, and Wales, while the North West and North East bucked the trend. Developers cite affordability pressures, rising mortgage rates, cost inflation, and geopolitical uncertainty as headwinds.
JRF and the Autonomy Institute propose a policy package combining rent controls, NIC on rental income, and reinstatement of full mortgage interest relief, arguing it could reduce average rents by £1,200/year while reducing the share of landlords making losses versus the current tax regime. The research presents a direct challenge to the assumption that rent controls would destabilise the PRS.
UK Finance Q1 2026 data shows BTL repossessions up 5% quarter-on-quarter while arrears continue to fall, with industry commentators flagging leasehold issues, inflation uncertainty, and Iran conflict as emerging risks to the outlook.
Average rental arrears hit a record £2,281 in Q1 2025, outstripping the average cash deposit of £1,308 by 74%, raising material questions about deposit adequacy for landlords operating under the Renters' Rights Act and without Section 21 recourse.
RICS has updated its professional standard on mortgage valuations for cladding-affected flats, effective November 2026, introducing clearer criteria for when EWS1 forms are required and allowing PAS 9980 appraisal summaries as alternatives in certain cases. The aim is to reduce unnecessary EWS1 requests while ensuring material valuation risks are still captured.
A 21-bedroom Oxford HMO has secured £3.05m in bridge-to-let financing at 80% LTV, with a bridging rate of 0.78%/month transitioning to a 6.24% BTL facility, illustrating active lender appetite for HMO conversions in university cities.
Aspen completed a £3.05m bridge-to-let facility at 80% LTV for a 21-unit HMO conversion on Iffley Road, Oxford, structured as a 0.78%/month bridge transitioning to a 6.24% BTL facility — illustrating current financing availability and terms for experienced HMO operators.
The UK property market is holding up better than sentiment suggests in 2026, with supply elevated, buyer motivation high, and sales conversion stable — but transaction timelines have stretched significantly to 17 weeks from offer to exchange, driven by new regulatory requirements rather than process inefficiency.
Mortgage product availability has fallen 10% since early March 2026, with high-LTV options down 14%, while average fixed rates remain significantly elevated versus early March levels. Affordability constraints are intensifying, with longer mortgage terms and higher income multiples emerging as coping mechanisms.
Mortgage product choice has fallen ~10% since early March 2026, with high-LTV deals (90%+) down 14%, while average fixed rates remain materially above pre-March levels despite slight April improvements. Affordability constraints are tightening, particularly for first-time buyers and low-equity borrowers.
Leasehold property transactions now take an average of 155 days to reach exchange versus 97 days for freehold — a record 58-day gap — with leasehold fall-through rates at 43% compared to 36% for freehold, driven by legal complexity and managing agent delays. These trends directly increase risk exposure and capital lock-up periods for leasehold investors.
The UK housing market is facing simultaneous headwinds from rising mortgage rates, softening demand, and elevated stock levels, with RICS data showing a sharp deterioration in near-term price expectations. While analysts remain split on severity, the weight of evidence points to buyer-favourable conditions and downward price pressure in the short term.
UK house prices fell for a second consecutive month in April, with Knight Frank warning of continued downward pressure as geopolitical uncertainty drives mortgage rates higher and dampens buyer confidence. Modest recovery is anticipated by year-end, but remains contingent on conflict duration, escalation, and fiscal policy response.
Halifax reports UK house prices fell 0.1% in April, the second consecutive monthly decline, as average two-year fixed mortgage rates surged to 5.77% from 4.83% in March. Conflicting data from Nationwide (showing 3% annual growth) highlights market volatility, while landlord auction exits jumped 70% amid regulatory and cost pressures.
Moneyfacts analysis sets out three geopolitical inflation scenarios showing mortgage rates could rise to 6.75% in a worst case, adding up to £3,380 annually to a £250,000 repayment mortgage. Even the central case implies a 'higher for longer' rate environment that sustains meaningful cost pressure above pre-conflict baselines.
Residential construction starts fell sharply in the three months to April 2026, down 33% year-on-year overall and 39% in the private sector, driven by geopolitical uncertainty, rising costs, and weak buyer confidence — signalling a prolonged supply squeeze ahead.
UK mortgage affordability has hit its worst level since 2008, with repayments averaging 21.3% of gross income, yet mortgage lending volumes rose 17% in 2025. Regional disparities are stark, with London commuter belt areas most stressed and Scotland most affordable.
Mortgage rates rising from 4.24% to 5.35% since February have pushed average monthly buying costs to £1,670 vs £1,547 to rent, making renting cheaper in over two-thirds of UK local authority areas and reinforcing rental demand fundamentals for landlords.
Knight Frank has revised UK house price growth down to 1.5% for 2025 citing geopolitical headwinds and elevated swap rates, while raising longer-term forecasts above 5% for 2030 on anticipated political change. Rental forecasts are trimmed but upward pressure is expected to persist due to the Renters' Rights Act reducing landlord supply.
Mortgage rates have surged at their fastest monthly pace since July 2023, driven by Middle East-related inflation uncertainty and swap rate movements, with BOE cuts now unlikely before 2027. Investors face higher financing costs and must decide whether to lock in now or wait for potential future reductions.
The Bank of England held rates at 3.75% amid geopolitical uncertainty and above-target inflation (3.3%), while signalling potential 'forceful' future rises. Industry commentary points to a price-sensitive, resilient-but-cautious housing market where mortgage affordability and buyer confidence remain the key pressure points.
The Bank of England is expected to hold rates at 3.75% amid inflation pressure linked to the Iran conflict, but a split MPC vote could signal a hawkish stance that keeps mortgage rates elevated — or even points to a near-term rise. Investors should not interpret a hold as a green light for cheaper borrowing.
The Bank of England is expected to hold rates at 3.75% but a split MPC vote is likely, reflecting rising inflation risk tied to the Iran conflict and energy costs. Market pricing suggests rates will remain elevated or rise further, meaning mortgage rates are unlikely to fall soon.
Barclays has introduced a sub-4% tracker mortgage (3.96%) for Premier customers at up to 75% LTV, marking the first such product in the current market cycle. While access is restricted, it signals the beginning of a potential downward rate shift that investors should monitor for acquisition and refinancing planning.
UK buy-to-let lending is recovering gradually through 2026–2027, driven by easing mortgage rates, strong rental demand, and returning lender competition, but remains constrained by regulatory costs and rates still above pre-2022 levels. Northern and Midlands markets offer the most viable yields, while the Renters Rights Act from May 2026 demands immediate landlord attention.
UK homes are selling in an average of 33 days — just one day longer than a year ago — with house prices up 1.3% year-on-year, though London and first-time buyer areas face greater headwinds from affordability and stamp duty pressures. Zoopla forecasts 1–1.5% growth in 2026, contingent on mortgage rate stability.
Zoopla's latest HPI shows UK house price inflation steady at 1.3%, with a clear North-South divide — Northern regions and Northern Ireland outperforming while London, South East and South West see flat or negative growth. Industry experts flag mortgage rate stabilisation, rural oversupply, affordability pressures for first-time buyers, and potential rent control risk as key forward-looking signals.
Knight Frank has cut its 2026 UK house price forecast from 3% to 1.5% citing mortgage rate pressure, weak sentiment, and geopolitical uncertainty, while raising longer-term projections on anticipated policy change. Rental growth is expected to persist as the Renters' Rights Act tightens supply.
A property lawyer warns that the government's commonhold transition proposals, without an affordable conversion route for existing leaseholders, risk creating a two-tier market where leasehold flats become harder to sell and mortgage. This poses direct liquidity and valuation risk to investors holding leasehold flat assets.
Debt-pressured smaller landlords are continuing to exit the rental market due to rising mortgage costs and regulatory changes, tightening rental supply while larger institutional investors consolidate market share.
UK mortgage rates have declined week-on-week for the first time since February, with swap rates falling below 4% due to easing geopolitical tensions. This suggests mortgage pricing may have peaked, offering potential relief for property investors facing borrowing costs near 6%.
West One Loans provides £5.78m development finance at 62.82% LTGDV for converting a Sheffield office building into 43 flats, demonstrating active lender support for office-to-residential conversions with structured build-and-exit financing.
Specialist lender Pallas Capital provided £3m development finance for 10 homes in Pembrokeshire at 65% LTV, demonstrating how alternative lenders handle complex legal challenges that conventional banks avoid.
Pallas Capital provided £3m development finance at 65% LTGDV for a 10-home build-to-sell project in Wales, demonstrating specialist lender appetite for complex sites with title issues.
UK inflation rose to 3.3% due to Middle East conflict driving energy costs, pushing the Bank of England to maintain higher rates rather than cut them. This creates headwinds for property investment with 1,000 mortgage products already withdrawn and development activity expected to remain defensive.
UK housing market activity has stalled with 74% of homeowners finding moving too expensive due to high mortgages, deposits, and Stamp Duty, while older homeowners face additional concerns about leasehold properties when downsizing.
UK house prices show static growth at 1.2% annually while facing rising mortgage rates and 3.3% inflation, with London particularly affected by SDLT burden and declining international investment.
A care home operator secured £600k bridging finance to acquire a second property despite having a 'Requires Improvement' CQC rating that blocked traditional mortgage funding. The deal demonstrates how bridging finance can overcome regulatory timing issues for property acquisitions.
Redwood Bank completed a complex multi-property refinancing package within four months, covering three properties with different ownership structures and lease arrangements. The case demonstrates how specialist lenders can handle SPV transfers, related-party leases, and mixed commercial-residential portfolios simultaneously.
UK housing market shows resilience despite elevated mortgage rates (5.42%) and record supply levels, with price growth continuing but below seasonal averages. Higher-end properties and Scotland outperform due to reduced mortgage dependency.
Rising mortgage rates are forcing landlords to adapt financing strategies, with 78.4% now choosing interest-only loans and many injecting £30k+ cash to reduce borrowing. Despite mortgage pressure, rental demand is rebounding with 24% increase in tenant searches.
Major mortgage lenders are cutting rates after recent sharp increases driven by geopolitical tensions, with two-year fixed rates falling from a 5.90% peak to 5.87%. Experts suggest borrowers should consider securing rates now as the situation remains volatile.
Winkworth's 2025 results reveal London property transactions at 2008 crisis levels while property management income overtook lettings income for the first time, reflecting landlord exodus and increased demand for fully managed services ahead of regulatory changes.
Q4 2025 saw 18-21% growth in BTL lending driven by remortgaging rather than new investment, with yields rising to 7.18% and rates falling to 4.77%. Market shows resilience but underlying purchase demand remains weak due to regulatory pressures.
Mortgage deals are disappearing at record speed (8-day shelf-life) with fixed rates rising sharply, creating significant financing challenges for property investors. Two-year fixed rates jumped 1% in March, adding ~£1,800 annually to typical mortgage costs.
UK property market shows stabilization with 3% increase in listings but 8% drop in sales completions, creating buyer-favorable conditions with increased negotiating power. Remortgage activity drives mortgage growth while purchase transactions remain constrained by affordability pressures.
BTL lending rose 18% in Q4 2025 driven by remortgaging activity, while rental yields improved to 7.18% and borrowing rates fell to 4.77%. However, new purchase demand remains weak due to regulatory pressures including the upcoming Renters' Rights Act.
UK rental market outside London shows first quarterly stagnation since 2017, with increased supply, reduced tenant competition, and 26% of listings seeing price cuts. Rising BTL mortgage rates due to geopolitical events compound pressure on landlord returns.
UK property market stabilised in Q1 2026 with increased listings favouring buyers, but affordability pressures and uncertainty kept transaction completions subdued despite rising mortgage valuations driven mainly by remortgaging.
Winkworth reported 11% profit decline despite network revenue growth, with CEO citing mortgage market volatility driven by geopolitical tensions as a key challenge for property investors.
IFS research reveals Help to Buy schemes mainly benefited higher-income buyers rather than improving affordability for lower earners, with limited overall impact on housing accessibility.
UK property market shows resilience despite mortgage rates rising to 4.57%, with sales down only 2% year-on-year, though seller confidence is weakening with 7% fewer new listings.
Norton Home Loans approved a £218,000 remortgage on a PRC property in Southampton after three mainstream lenders declined, highlighting the ongoing need for specialist lenders when dealing with non-standard construction properties.
Norton Home Loans provided a £218,000 remortgage on a PRC property in Southampton after three lenders declined, demonstrating specialist lending options for non-standard construction properties.
UK housing market activity has declined sharply due to mortgage rate volatility rising from 4.83% to 5.90% in March, causing transaction chains to collapse and price reductions to accelerate. First-time buyers are withdrawing, affecting market liquidity across all segments.
Mortgage rates have surged significantly since February 2026, with 2-year fixes up 99 basis points, prompting borrowers to shift toward shorter-term deals for flexibility. This trend directly impacts property investor financing costs and refinancing strategies across all segments.
UK house prices fell 0.5% in March as mortgage rates jumped from 4.83% to 5.90% due to Iran war-related inflation concerns. Property market momentum has stalled with hundreds of mortgage deals withdrawn.
Middle East ceasefire could reduce UK mortgage rates from 5% to 4.3% by 2027, saving £100 monthly on typical £250k loans, though economists warn the decline will be gradual and depends on sustained peace.
UK housing market sentiment may improve if Middle East ceasefire holds, but mortgage rates unlikely to return to February lows, keeping affordability constraints and limiting price growth. RICS data shows weakening buyer confidence and transaction levels.
UK house prices fell 0.5% in March with annual growth slowing to 0.8%, as rising mortgage rates driven by Middle East conflict and inflation concerns undermine market momentum. Supply has reached 11-year highs while affordability pressures mount for buyers.
Mortgage rates surged 81-99 basis points since February due to geopolitical tensions, causing borrowers to shift toward shorter 2-year fixes (+13% demand) and away from 5-year deals (-9%), signaling market uncertainty and expectations of potential rate falls.
JPMorgan CEO warns that Middle East conflicts could drive sustained inflation and higher interest rates than markets expect, with UK mortgage costs already rising and product availability falling.
Buy-to-let mortgage rates have surged to multi-year highs, increasing typical loan costs by £1,100 monthly, while landlords face additional pressures from upcoming rental reforms and potential £10,000 EPC upgrade costs. Industry warns this could accelerate landlord exits and worsen rental supply shortages.
Buy-to-let mortgage rates have surged to 5.40% (2-year) and 5.91% (5-year) due to Middle East tensions, creating significant pressure on landlords already facing Renters' Rights Act compliance costs and EPC upgrade requirements.
BTL mortgage rates have surged to 5.40% (2-year) and 5.91% (5-year) due to Middle East unrest, increasing typical loan costs by £1,100 annually while 1,300 deals have been withdrawn. Combined with upcoming Renters' Rights Act and EPC C requirements costing up to £10,000 per property, landlords face mounting financial pressure that could reduce rental stock or increase rents.
UK mortgage rates have surged 100bps in a month due to Iran conflict, with 1,200+ products withdrawn and typical borrowers facing £150+ higher monthly payments. This represents the biggest market shock since the 2022 mini-Budget.
First-time buyers show 90.5% mortgage dependency compared to 82% for investors, making them most vulnerable to rising rates. London's high dependency (87.4%) and concentration of first-time buyers (63%) creates particular market sensitivity.
NRLA warns of a 'perfect storm' of rising landlord costs including £1,100 higher annual mortgage payments, 2% income tax increases from 2027, and up to £10,000 per property for energy efficiency upgrades. These cumulative pressures will likely drive rent increases for tenants.
Jersey politicians rejected plans to remove mortgage interest tax relief from buy-to-let properties, with concerns that this could force small landlords out of the market. The proposal would have generated around £2m in additional tax revenue but was voted down 21-18.
UK house price growth accelerated to 2.2% annually in March, but Middle East conflict has reversed interest rate expectations from cuts to increases, potentially dampening future market momentum despite current regional variations and strong performance in Northern Ireland.
UK mortgage approvals rose modestly in February, but borrowing costs have since surged from 3.5% to 4.5%+ due to geopolitical tensions, with rates potentially reaching 5%.
UK mortgage approvals rose to 62,600 in February from January's two-year low, but geopolitical tensions are pushing rates from 3.5% to potentially 5%, creating urgent refinancing decisions for property investors.
UK property buyer enquiries fell 13% year-on-year in March while sales agreed dropped only 2%, indicating market consolidation around serious buyers as rising mortgage rates and economic uncertainty deter speculative interest.
Buy-to-let lenders are becoming increasingly selective, forcing landlords to shift from expansion-focused strategies to portfolio optimization and restructuring. Average UK rents rose 3.5% to £1,374, with regional variations showing strongest growth in North East England.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves coordinated with major UK lenders to proactively contact 1.6 million customers facing mortgage rate renewals, reinforcing Mortgage Charter protections including advance rate securing and temporary interest-only options. This signals government concern about mortgage market pressures affecting both homeowners and the broader property market.
UK mortgage rates have surged to 5.50% (19-month high) due to Middle East conflict driving inflation fears, adding £1,000+ annually to typical £250k loans. Market expects further BoE rate rises instead of previously anticipated cuts.
Bank of England rate hike expectations have pushed mortgage costs above 4.3%, driven by Middle East conflict concerns, potentially damaging UK property market recovery. Expert analysis suggests BoE may be overreacting given current economic conditions differ significantly from 2022-2023.
Middle East conflict has driven oil prices from $70 to $100/barrel, causing UK mortgage rates to rise from 4.83% to 5.35% with 19.5% fewer deals available. Bank of England expected to raise rates twice by 0.25% each, significantly impacting property investment financing costs.
Mortgage rates are rising rapidly due to Middle East tensions, with average 2-year fixed rates hitting 5.51% and over 200 low-deposit deals withdrawn since March. This creates immediate challenges for investor financing and refinancing strategies.
UK mortgage rates are rising sharply to 5.43% for two-year fixes as lenders withdraw hundreds of products due to market expectations of higher Bank of England rates driven by geopolitical tensions. This creates immediate pressure on property investment costs and refinancing strategies.
UK mortgage rates have jumped overnight to 5.35% due to 'Trumpflation' concerns, with potential to reach 5.50-5.75%, adding £900-1,500 annually to typical £250k mortgages and significantly impacting property investment economics.
Middle East conflict escalation has driven up borrowing costs and mortgage rates, with markets now pricing in potential Bank of England rate hikes instead of cuts. This creates headwinds for property demand and investor financing costs.
UK mortgage rates have surged past 5% due to geopolitical tensions, with hundreds of products withdrawn, creating significant uncertainty among property investors and homeowners about future rate directions.
Mortgage product shelf-life has plunged to just 14 days due to market uncertainty, creating urgency for refinancing decisions. This volatility mirrors previous crisis periods and suggests investors should act quickly to secure deals before further product withdrawals.
Swap rates have risen due to Middle East tensions, potentially leading to higher mortgage rates, but remain significantly lower year-on-year, suggesting the increase represents short-term volatility rather than trend reversal.
Bank of England holds rates at 3.75% but adopts hawkish tone amid inflation concerns, prompting immediate mortgage rate increases and potential product withdrawals. Geopolitical tensions and stagflation risks create volatile lending environment.
Bank of England holds interest rates at 3.75% due to Middle East conflict driving inflation concerns, causing mortgage rates to rise slightly while industry experts report resilient buyer demand despite increased caution.
UK mortgage rates have surged from 4.83% to 5.28% in weeks due to geopolitical tensions, with sub-4% deals now unavailable, adding £800 annually to typical mortgage costs and particularly impacting first-time buyers and refinancing activity.
Sub-4% fixed-rate mortgages have disappeared from the UK market as all major lenders repriced upward, pushing typical deals back above 5% due to rising swap rates caused by global uncertainty. This threatens expected Bank of England rate cuts and significantly impacts property investor financing costs.
UK mortgage rates have surged to 5.28% following geopolitical tensions, adding £788 annually to typical £250k mortgages and causing lenders to withdraw 689 products including all sub-4% deals from major banks.
UK households spent a record £226bn on housing in 2025, with mortgage interest payments driving most cost increases for owners while private rental costs reached £81bn. Growth is slowing but uncertainty remains for 2026 due to inflation concerns.
UK housing market shows high inventory levels creating buyer advantage and forcing sellers to price competitively from launch, while mortgage rates rise to 4.51% due to geopolitical uncertainty.
UK mortgage rates have surged from sub-4% to over 5% in just four weeks due to Middle East conflict concerns, with lenders withdrawing hundreds of deals in a sharp market shift reminiscent of the 2022 mini-Budget turmoil.
UK mortgage market experiencing severe turbulence comparable to 2022 mini-Budget crisis, with rates above 5% and 500+ product withdrawals driven by geopolitical tensions and inflation concerns.
UK mortgage rates have risen above 5% for two-year fixes due to Middle East conflict raising inflation expectations, with nearly 500 mortgage products withdrawn in two days - the most severe disruption since the 2022 mini-Budget.
UK mortgage lending reached record £1.734trn but new commitments fell 11.9%, with high-LTV lending at highest since 2008. Geopolitical volatility threatens recent affordability improvements that were driving buyer confidence.
Middle East conflict has driven mortgage rates higher through energy market volatility, with 5-year SONIA swaps reaching 3.9%. The duration of conflict will determine longer-term housing market impact and government fiscal choices.
RICS survey reveals Middle East conflict is dampening UK housing market sentiment during peak transaction season, with buyer enquiries falling to -26% net balance and mortgage rates likely to stay higher due to energy price spikes.
UK mortgage rates have surged above 5% with 472 products withdrawn in 48 hours, creating the most turbulent conditions since the 2022 mini-Budget crisis. This directly impacts all property investors' financing costs and deal viability.
Financial markets now expect fewer Bank of England rate cuts this year due to Middle East conflict driving energy prices up, though some analysts believe markets are overreacting and three cuts remain possible.
UK mortgage rates are rising due to Middle East conflict concerns affecting inflation expectations, with major lenders increasing rates by up to 0.25%. Nearly 1 million households face refinancing shock in 2026 with potential annual cost increases of £2,000-£5,600.
Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East are threatening to delay expected interest rate cuts and potentially increase mortgage rates, creating uncertainty for property buyers and investors just as market momentum was building.
Major UK lenders including Nationwide, HSBC and Coventry Building Society have raised mortgage rates by 0.10-0.25% due to Middle East conflict driving inflation fears and reducing expectations of BoE rate cuts. Experts advise securing fixed rates sooner rather than later.
Over a third of UK flats face mortgage lending restrictions due to service charges exceeding 1% of property value, creating a crisis where affected properties become unmortgageable and unsellable.
Commercial mortgage lending in 2026 requires stronger preparation focusing on EPC compliance, DSCR ratios of 1.25x-1.5x, and sophisticated risk management including interest rate hedging. Lenders increasingly evaluate operator quality alongside asset quality.
UK gilt yields rose sharply despite falling inflation, reducing prospects for Bank of England rate cuts and putting upward pressure on mortgage rates due to ongoing geopolitical risks affecting energy supplies.
Major UK lenders including HSBC, Nationwide and Coventry Building Society have increased fixed mortgage rates following swap rate volatility, with more rises expected. This coincides with weakening construction activity and affects 1.8 million borrowers facing refinancing in 2026.
Middle East conflict has immediately impacted UK mortgage markets with 2-year swap rates rising 26 basis points and rate cut probability dropping from 80% to 30%, while energy price increases could push base rates to 4.5% and add £500 to household bills.
Mortgage approvals fell to 60,000 in January, below the 6-month average, with experts citing ongoing Budget uncertainty and suggesting government intervention may be needed to stimulate activity.
UK gilt yields rose sharply despite falling inflation, reducing prospects for March BoE rate cuts and signaling higher mortgage costs ahead. Energy supply disruption risks from geopolitical tensions could push inflation 0.3-0.4% higher, encouraging defensive lender pricing.
UK mortgage approvals fell to a two-year low of 59,999 in January 2026, despite modest house price growth and improving affordability, as economic uncertainty keeps buyers cautious. The market shows signs of plateauing after recovery, with increased viewings not translating to completed transactions.
UK mortgage approvals fell to two-year lows in January 2026 despite house prices rising nominally, with buyers remaining cautious due to economic uncertainty and real-terms price declines improving affordability gradually.
Average leasehold service charges in England and Wales hit record £2,405 annually in 2025, with 37% of flats now exceeding the 1% property value threshold that restricts mortgage lending availability.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves endorses building societies' campaign to help first-time buyers access homeownership through low/no deposit mortgages and flexible lending. Research shows many potential buyers could purchase sooner than expected but haven't explored available options.
UK house prices rose 1.3% annually with strong regional variations, while increased supply from landlords exiting ahead of the Renters Rights Bill is creating opportunities as 40% of homes are now cheaper to buy than rent.
Bank of England MPC member Alan Taylor forecasts three interest rate cuts in 2026, potentially bringing base rate to 3.0%, citing easing inflation and weakening jobs market. This would significantly benefit mortgage borrowers and property investors through lower financing costs.
UK house price growth has moderated to 1.3% annually with significant regional variations, while improved mortgage affordability now makes 40% of properties cheaper to buy than rent.
Authoritative analysis of the UK buy-to-let refinancing wave: maturity clustering, affordability reset magnitude, lender behaviour shifts, regulatory risk, portfolio exposure and strategic responses for property investors.
Why refinancing risk is replacing interest rate risk for UK property investors: maturity clustering, debt service coverage (DSCR) shocks, lender behaviour shifts, and the decisions investors must make in the next 24-36 months.
UK inflation fell to 3% in January 2026, increasing expectations of a Bank of England rate cut to 3.5% in March, with property experts suggesting this could ease mortgage rates and improve market sentiment.
UK property transactions face increasing delays from expanded regulatory and compliance processes that run independently of traditional conveyancing milestones, with lender intervention and continuous verification requirements now determining completion timelines regardless of legal readiness.
Connells Group's 9% revenue growth to £1.16bn and expanding lettings portfolio of 128,000 properties signals UK housing market stabilization. Their performance indicates recovering mortgage activity and strong lettings demand despite mid-year policy uncertainty.
A domestic abuse victim faced mortgage repossession after her husband's death left her unable to discuss the mortgage or sell property due to probate complications, accumulating £34,700 in arrears before Halifax eventually suspended proceedings. The case highlights risks when properties are held in sole names and the importance of proper insurance and legal protections.
Nationwide has completed the UK's first electronic mortgage deed signature without witness requirements, using Qualified Electronic Signatures to eliminate paper-based processes and reduce transaction times. This digital advancement is expected to become industry standard, streamlining remortgage and purchase transactions.
Nationwide becomes the first UK lender to allow electronic mortgage deed signing using Qualified Electronic Signatures, potentially speeding up property transactions and reducing costs for investors.
Analysis of the UK property market's shift from policy uncertainty to implementation reality. Explore execution risk, operational friction, and strategy divergence in the current investment landscape.
1.8 million UK mortgage deals expire in 2026, creating significant refinancing opportunities and risks as borrowers face potential payment changes of hundreds of pounds monthly depending on their current deal vintage.
UK average house prices crossed £300k for the first time according to Halifax, though wage growth has outpaced price inflation since 2022. Market stability is returning with modest growth expected, but affordability challenges persist for new buyers.
Bank of England's 5-4 vote to hold rates at 3.75% suggests competitive mortgage deals will persist, with potential for 1-3 further cuts bringing rates to 3-3.5% this year. Current sub-4% fixed rates may remain available longer, benefiting remortgaging investors and new buyers.
Bank of England holds base rate at 3.75% in close 5-4 vote, with Governor Bailey signalling potential cuts later in 2024. Industry experts report improving market confidence and modest momentum despite subdued transaction activity.
Bank of England holds base rate at 3.75% with split 5-4 vote, signaling potential future cuts. Property industry experts remain optimistic about market momentum despite the hold.
Bank of England expected to hold rates at 3.75% today but cuts likely from April onwards, with mortgage rates already at 3-year lows creating opportunities for buyers and remortgaging borrowers.
Santander becomes first major high street bank to offer 98% LTV mortgages at 5.19% for first-time buyers, expanding ultra-high LTV market access but with increased negative equity risks.
Santander launches 98% LTV mortgage for first-time buyers with significant restrictions including £500,000 cap, no flats, and 4.45x income limit. The product signals broader market movement towards higher LTV lending but may have limited practical impact due to constraints.
UK mortgage rates have risen recently as markets reduce expectations for Bank of England rate cuts due to mixed economic signals, though downward pressure could return if economic weakness emerges.
One-third of first-time buyers enter the market with 25%+ deposits while 42% use high-LTV mortgages, creating a two-tier market with £174 monthly payment differences between low and high equity buyers.
Major lenders including Nationwide, NatWest and Santander have increased mortgage rates due to rising swap rates and reduced expectations of Bank of England cuts. This threatens to slow the recovery in property market activity.
Knight Frank forecasts 3% UK house price growth in 2026 despite rising mortgage rates, with fewer expected Bank Rate cuts reducing near-term lending optimism. Economic uncertainty and job market weakness could influence rate policy and housing market momentum.
Conveyancers warn that rapid implementation of commonhold tenure could expose property owners to legal risks, mortgage lending issues, and governance challenges, questioning whether the system is ready for large-scale deployment.
UK Finance will charge conveyancers £50+VAT per user to access the essential Mortgage Lenders' Handbook from June 2026, creating unavoidable costs that will likely increase transaction expenses for property investors.
UK housing market shows early signs of recovery in 2026 with mortgage rates dropping to 4% and 6% more homes available for sale. House prices increased modestly by 1.2% annually to £269,800, with stronger growth in affordable northern regions versus slight declines in southern markets.
Mortgage affordability is improving significantly, with payments expected to drop from 49.1% to 40-41% of gross income by 2026 as rates fall to 4.25-4.50%. This marks the best affordability since 2021, driven by falling rates and wage growth.
LSL Property Services announces £12m share buyback programme following strong 2025 performance with 6% revenue growth to £183m and record 18% operating margins. Company signals continued health in property services sector with positive 2026 outlook.
Nearly one million UK homeowners face average annual mortgage payment increases of £2,124 as ultra-low fixed-rate deals from 2021 expire this year. This creates significant cashflow implications for property investors and potential opportunities in a market where some owners may be forced to sell.
Carter Jonas forecasts 2026 UK property market recovery driven by improved mortgage affordability through FCA lending reforms, expected interest rate cuts, and transaction process improvements. Wage growth outpacing house prices is quietly improving affordability despite challenges from Help to Buy ending.
UK inflation unexpectedly rose to 3.4% in December, though economists view this as temporary, suggesting the Bank of England may continue measured rate cuts toward the 2% target.
Government announces £15bn Warm Homes Plan to triple solar installations and install 450,000 heat pumps annually by 2030 through grants, zero-interest loans, and green mortgage incentives. This represents a major opportunity for property investors to reduce operating costs and enhance asset values.
Nationwide expands high loan-to-income lending to 6x income for home movers and remortgaging customers, following regulatory changes. This significantly improves financing access for property investors beyond first-time buyers.
UK inflation rose to 3.4% in December, effectively ruling out February rate cuts and pushing expectations back to April at earliest. Investors should act quickly to secure current mortgage rates before they potentially rise again.
Energy efficiency improvements can cut property running costs by up to £2,000 annually, with smart thermostats and LED lighting offering fastest payback, while also unlocking green mortgage benefits.
First-time buyer deposits are falling (down 14% YoY) with higher LTV lending increasing, while Gen Z buyers show strong purchase intentions for 2026 despite affordability pressures.
Nationwide's affordability report reveals significant regional variations with London requiring £69,000+ deposits versus £23,000 in the North, while improved affordability drives 20% increase in first-time buyer activity nationwide.
National rental yields reached 7.7% in Q4 2024 with North East leading at 9.6%, while mortgage rates improved and the north-south yield gap continues to narrow.
Analysts predict a booming mortgage market for 2026 with falling rates driven by lender competition, while 1.8 million borrowers face rate renewals creating significant refinancing opportunities.
Finance expert predicts UK interest rates will fall to 2.75% by summer 2026 due to rising unemployment and falling services inflation, potentially involving four rate cuts versus the two currently priced by markets.
Mortgage rates are forecast to settle between 4-4.5% in 2026 as Base Rate reaches 3.5%, offering modest savings but remaining well above historic lows. Critical timing as 1.8 million fixed-rate mortgages expire in 2026, forcing borrowers to refinance at significantly higher rates.
Bank of England cuts base rate to 3.75% in narrow 5-4 vote, but experts warn mortgage rates may have bottomed out with limited further cuts expected in 2026.
FCA announces comprehensive mortgage market reforms from 2026, targeting flexible products for first-time buyers, improved later-life lending, AI-enhanced advice, and better protection for vulnerable consumers. These changes could significantly expand lending accessibility and product innovation for property investors.
First-time buyers borrowed a record £82.8bn in the year to September 2025, representing 30% growth and 20% of total housing market activity. This surge reflects improved mortgage accessibility, regulatory changes, and continued rental property shortages driving homeownership demand.
UK mortgage lending jumped 36.9% to £80.4bn in Q3 2025, the strongest quarterly rise since 2020, with high-risk lending increasing but arrears falling. This signals improved market confidence and financing availability for property investors.
UK mortgage rates have fallen to lowest levels since September 2022, with 5-year fixed rates dropping below 5% and product choice expanding to over 7,000 options. High LTV products (90-95%) have seen particularly strong growth, improving access for leveraged property investors.
Nationwide and HSBC have cut mortgage rates across multiple LTV bands, with Nationwide offering a 3.50% two-year fix at 60% LTV, marking increased lender competition that could benefit property investors seeking financing.
Mortgage market reaches strongest position since 2007 with 7,158 products available, rates below 5%, and substantial remortgage savings opportunities. Optimistic outlook for 2026 with expectations of further rate cuts and increased lending activity.
Barclays cuts mortgage rates following BoE base rate reductions, with rates now at lowest levels since 2022. Multiple lenders are competing aggressively, creating opportunities for property investors to secure cheaper financing.
Analysis suggests modest house price growth in 2026 may be offset by falling mortgage rates, keeping affordability neutral. Remortgage borrowers with high equity stand to benefit most from rate cuts.
UK mortgage borrowing rose to £4.5bn in November despite Budget uncertainty, with remortgaging activity increasing as borrowers seek better rates. This signals early market recovery momentum heading into 2025.
Following the Autumn Budget and BoE rate cuts, mortgage borrowers face mixed impacts including beneficial rate reductions but new challenges from the Mansion Tax on £2m+ properties affecting mortgage assessments and potentially pushing up mid-range house prices.
November mortgage data shows resilient market activity with net lending growth at 19-month high despite slight rise in mortgage rates to 4.20%, indicating continued investor and buyer confidence despite economic uncertainty.
HSBC leads 2026 mortgage rate cuts across residential and BTL products, signaling increased lender competition as 1.8 million borrowers prepare to refinance this year.
A distillation of what's now clear for UK property investors heading into 2026: market selectivity, mortgage rate stability, accelerating compliance, and supply risk.
Zoopla forecasts 2026 will see continued strong property sales activity, modest 1.5% house price growth with regional variations, and the strongest BTL investment year since 2022 driven by rental yield opportunities particularly in northern England.
Survey of 100 mortgage industry leaders reveals 77% expect affordability to worsen by 2027 due to budget tax increases and rising unemployment. This signals tightening financing conditions that could impact property investment strategies.
Industry survey reveals 77% of mortgage professionals expect affordability to worsen by 2027 due to tax increases, higher unemployment, and reduced disposable incomes. FCA considering loosening affordability rules to help more people access mortgages.
The FCA is moving towards more flexible mortgage affordability rules to better serve self-employed and young borrowers. This regulatory shift could expand the mortgage market and improve access for underserved groups.
Mortgage demand surged in December with borrowers moving ahead of the Bank of England's rate cut, showing increased appetite for variable-rate products as investors bet on further rate falls.
Two weeks after the Autumn Budget, UK property investors heading into 2026 should focus on rate realism, refinancing pressure, planning reform execution risk, and tightening landlord regulation.
Bank of England cuts base rate to 3.75%, lowest in nearly three years, providing mortgage relief and boosting property market confidence heading into 2026. Industry experts expect competitive lender responses and gradual market improvement despite economic caution.
Rightmove predicts mortgages could become cheaper than rent in 2026 for first-time buyers with deposits, driven by continued buyer's market conditions, wage growth outpacing house prices, and future landlord tax increases.
Bank of England expected to cut base rate from 4% to 3.75% due to falling inflation, potentially easing mortgage costs for 1.8 million borrowers facing refinancing in 2025.
IMLA forecasts significant growth in UK mortgage lending through 2027, with buy-to-let market recovery driven by falling rates and professional operators replacing amateur landlords following regulatory changes.
Barclays research shows 19% of UK homeowners received family financial help, including 20% of second-steppers with average support of £81,451, highlighting persistent affordability challenges across the property ladder.
Sirius Finance completed an £18.4m portfolio refinance at 74% LTV across Greater Manchester, helping a client move assets into a limited company while securing better rates and £3m for further acquisitions.
UK Finance forecasts mortgage market growth slowing to 2% in 2026 due to affordability pressures, with BTL lending remaining flat at £11bn and 1.8 million fixed-rate mortgages expiring requiring refinancing.
UK property asking prices fell 1.8% in December 2025, ending the year 0.6% lower, driven by Budget uncertainty that reversed earlier positive market activity. Rightmove forecasts 2% price growth for 2026 as confidence returns.
Rightmove predicts 2% house price growth in 2026 driven by improved affordability from lower mortgage rates (4.33% vs 5.08% last year), relaxed lending criteria, and wage growth. December 2025 prices fell 1.8%, ending the year 0.6% lower than 2024.
Weekly property investment insights covering mortgage rate shifts, rental demand normalization, EPC upgrade costs, and enforcement deadlines affecting UK property investors in December 2025.
Bank of England expected to cut base rates to 3.75% in December with further cuts to 3% by summer 2026, creating significant mortgage cost reduction opportunities for property investors.
Lettings agents and mortgage brokers are positioned to become essential intermediaries helping landlords navigate mandatory EPC upgrades, with 51.5% of PRS properties requiring £24bn in retrofit investment by 2030.
53% of borrowers now prefer 2-year fixed mortgages as rates have fallen below 5-year deals (4.86% vs 4.91%), driven by expectations of further rate cuts.
Nearly half of borrowers now prefer two-year fixed mortgages over longer terms, driven by expectations of further rate falls. This shift toward flexibility over stability varies significantly by borrower type and suggests changing market sentiment.
Relaxed loan-to-income limits have boosted first-time buyer activity by 11% in Q3, while remortgaging volumes surged 50% year-on-year as borrowers refinance amid falling base rates.
UK mortgage lending rebounded in Q3 with 48% increase in refinancing activity, though affordability remains tight with first-time buyers paying 22% of income on mortgages. FCA's Mortgage Rule Review may widen access for underserved groups including self-employed borrowers.
Mortgage searches plummeted 14.64% in November as investors and homebuyers paused before the Budget, with BTL purchases hitting yearly lows despite record product availability reaching 29,200 options.
HTB completed a £1.65m refinance across 12 properties on Isle of Sheppey in just 8 days, consolidating multiple lenders and raising £1m capital for overseas purchase. The case demonstrates effective coordination and legal structuring for complex portfolio refinancing.
A new mansion tax starting April 2028 will charge £2,500-£7,500 annually on properties worth over £2m, with lenders needing to factor this into mortgage assessments and many asset-rich homeowners potentially struggling with affordability.
UK mortgage approvals fell to 65,000 in October due to Budget uncertainty, but experts predict market recovery in early 2026 as tax threats on £500k-£2m properties have been lifted.
UK homeowners increasingly use equity release primarily to repay mortgages (rising from 36% to 63%), with London homeowners releasing an average of £145,471 per plan. This shift suggests financial stress among older homeowners who may represent potential property sellers.
First-time buyer affordability has improved significantly with price-to-income ratios falling to 5.9 nationally, the best level since 2015. This shift could reduce rental demand and increase competition for entry-level properties.
BTL landlords are shifting from portfolio expansion to protecting existing investments, with purchase searches down 13.67% and remortgage searches up 6.05% year-on-year. This reflects a strategic response to higher borrowing costs and compressed yields, with landlords prioritizing refinancing over growth.
Savills has halved its 2026 UK house price growth forecast from 4% to 2%, citing tax uncertainty and economic headwinds, but maintains 22.2% growth over five years with strongest performance expected in affordable northern regions and Scotland.
Average mortgage rates have fallen below 5% for the first time since September 2022, representing a significant milestone for property investors facing refinancing decisions.
UK rental market shows record rents but slowing growth as supply remains constrained and policy uncertainty drives one-third of landlords to consider market exit. Rising costs and regulatory changes are creating headwinds for landlord investment decisions.
UK inflation fell to 3.6% in October, potentially triggering December base rate cuts and continuing mortgage rate competition, with best 2-year fixed rates approaching 3.5%.
Budget 2025 property tax changes will mainly affect high-end properties above £1.5-2m, while the mainstream residential market remains healthy with falling mortgage rates and improving lending conditions.
UK inflation fell to 3.6% in October, making a December interest rate cut highly likely unless the upcoming Budget creates complications. This signals continued mortgage rate improvements for property investors.
Mortgage repossessions in England and Wales hit a five-year high of 10,853 orders in 2024-5, driven by rising unemployment and interest rates. Court reports reveal financial distress affecting both homeowners and landlords, with legal support services overwhelmed by demand.
High LTV mortgage rates have fallen to 3-year lows with 95% LTV deals increasing significantly, creating opportunities for leveraged property investors. However, upcoming Budget uncertainty may impact market dynamics.
Mortgage rates for low-deposit deals (90-95% LTV) have fallen to 3-year lows while product availability hits 17-year highs, creating improved access for property investors with limited deposits and refinancing opportunities.
Almost one in five first-time buyers are seeking 60% LTV mortgages (requiring 40% deposits of ~£110k), while 41% need 90-95% LTV deals, revealing a stark divide between cash-rich buyers with family support and those stretching to enter the market.
HTB provided a £4m refinance facility for a London landlord's two semi-commercial properties (shops with flats above), recognizing uplifted values post-improvement and enabling portfolio expansion through equity release.
Bank of England holds rates at 4% with close 5-4 vote, awaiting Budget clarity before potential December rate cut. Industry experts expect continued market stability with improved lending conditions supporting gradual recovery.
The Bank of England may cut interest rates from 4% to 3.75% today despite mixed expert predictions, with mortgage rates already falling in anticipation and potential benefits for borrowers refinancing later this year.
UTB completed a £505k bridging loan for downsizing in 7 days despite requiring full valuations for non-standard construction, demonstrating fast turnaround capabilities for time-sensitive property transactions.
Barratt Redrow reports resilient Q1 performance despite challenging market conditions, with slightly lower reservation rates but strong forward order book, while highlighting ongoing concerns about mortgage affordability and planning uncertainties.
Mortgage market activity declined in October with first-time buyer searches down 14.4% and purchase activity falling sharply, while remortgaging dominated as buyers pause ahead of the Budget despite record mortgage product availability.
Mortgage market activity declined in October with purchase searches down significantly while refinancing dominated, driven by Budget uncertainty and affordability pressures despite record mortgage product availability.
HSBC now offers mortgages up to 6.5x income for Premier customers (£100k+ earners) at 90% LTV, marking the highest income multiple in years and signaling increased lender confidence following regulatory flexibility.
HSBC now offers mortgages up to 6.5x income for Premier customers earning £100k+, reflecting increased regulatory flexibility and lender appetite to grow market share.
Average mortgage rates have fallen below 5% for the first time since the mini-Budget crisis of September 2022, offering significant cost savings for property investors refinancing or acquiring new properties.
Arc & Co. completed £19.5m of BTL financing across three complex deals with GB Bank, demonstrating alternative lending solutions for overseas borrowers, multi-unit portfolios, and challenging property situations where traditional lenders cannot serve.
UK house prices grew 2.4% annually in October with continued market stability, while Nationwide data reveals that loft conversions adding bedrooms can increase property values by up to 24%.
The property market remains active but sensitive to pricing, with auctions providing real-time demand signals while investors and buyers await Budget clarity and potential reforms to mainstream buying processes.
Specialist lender Redwood Bank completed a £798,000 refinance for a Grade II-listed Hereford building converted to 10 flats, offering competitive terms including green cashback rewards.
UK rental growth accelerated to 1.5% in Q3 outside London (0.9% in London), with annual growth at 3.1%, while rental supply remains constrained despite recent improvements.
Landlords risk mortgage application rejections by having rent payments and mortgage payments on the same day, as late rent can cause mortgage payment bounces that trigger lender blacklisting.
Aspen's £4.3m Bridge-to-Let facility enabled a family development business to refinance two properties (13-unit apartment block and HMO) with flexible exit options. The hybrid product offers competitive rates and demonstrates innovative financing for mixed portfolios.
Foxtons reports Q3 revenue growth of 3% driven by strong lettings performance (+5%) offsetting weak sales (-7%), with the company positioning itself for regulatory changes while focusing on recurring lettings income.
September inflation at 3.8% (below forecasts) increases likelihood of Bank of England rate cut by December, potentially reducing mortgage costs for property investors.
Nationwide's expansion to 6x income lending has driven a 53% increase in first-time buyers using their Helping Hand mortgage, with 23,000 buyers supported in the past year, particularly concentrated in high-cost areas like London and the South East.
Q2 2025 BTL lending remained stable with 49,590 new mortgages worth £8.8bn, while average gross rental yields rose to 7.26% and interest cover ratios improved to 210%, though possessions increased 11.3%.
Falling government borrowing costs may give the Chancellor more fiscal headroom, but property tax increases remain likely in the November Budget to address the £30 billion fiscal gap.
Landbay has reduced 5-year fixed buy-to-let rates by up to 0.15%, with 75% LTV rates now at 4.89% (1% fee) or 4.09% (5% fee). Premier range remortgage products also saw 0.13% reductions.
UK house prices show modest growth but remain below historical averages due to high supply levels and buyer hesitancy ahead of the Autumn Budget. Market activity is being constrained by political uncertainty despite underlying resilience in demand.
Estate agents are processing £100bn in sales - the largest pipeline since 2021 - driven by mortgage rate stability and banks increasing borrowing capacity by 20%. This represents strong market recovery and renewed confidence.
The upcoming Budget is described as pivotal for property market outlook, with potential major changes to stamp duty, capital gains tax, and wealth taxes that could significantly impact property investment viability.
Hampshire Trust Bank completed a £1.2m facility for an overseas landlord acquiring a London semi-commercial property with residential flats, demonstrating specialist lenders' growing appetite for complex cases involving international investors and mixed-use properties.
UK mortgage rates increased for the first time in eight months, with 2-year and 5-year fixed rates rising to 4.98% and 5.02% respectively, though they remain significantly below 2023 levels.
Mortgage rates have stopped falling and edged up slightly to around 5% for fixed deals, with lenders showing caution ahead of the Budget and uncertain base rate outlook.
Major housebuilders Barratt Redrow and Persimmon have launched a private 5% deposit scheme with Barclays and TSB, offering 15% equity loans to replace the defunct Help to Buy program. This addresses affordability barriers for new-build purchases but is currently limited to these developers' properties.
Aspen Bridging has successfully completed its first dual representation, no valuation deals, including a £700k newbuild purchase for a foreign national completed in 10 days and a £250k auction purchase in 7 days.
The mortgage lending industry warns that proposed property tax rises would generate minimal revenue (under £6bn) while potentially damaging market confidence and economic growth. Market uncertainty ahead of the November Budget is already slowing housing transactions.
Lloyds Bank research shows that in 9 of 11 major UK cities, buying with a 5% deposit results in lower monthly costs than renting, with Glasgow offering the largest savings at £396/month.
North East leads UK rental yields at 9.0% in Q3 2025, while rental growth exceeds 20% in several regions and larger portfolio landlords increasingly dominate the market.
UK house prices fell 0.3% in September with annual growth slowing to 1.3%, driven by affordability pressures and Autumn Budget uncertainty, though potential SDLT payment installments could provide relief.
Limited company BTL mortgage rates have fallen significantly (5.04% vs 6.53% last year) with product availability doubling, while potential Budget changes on NICs could further drive landlords toward this tax-efficient structure.
September mortgage data shows remortgaging driving market activity while purchase demand, especially from first-time buyers, remains weak, indicating defensive market behavior rather than genuine recovery.
Inspired Lending completed a £380k bridging loan within two weeks for a Bedfordshire land acquisition after mainstream lenders failed due to automated valuation issues, using a third-party legal charge on the borrower's residence. This demonstrates how specialist lenders can provide speed and flexibility when conventional financing stalls.
Paragon Bank has eased BTL lending criteria with reduced ICR stress rates and streamlined processes, while seeing strong demand from both new landlords and portfolio investors focusing on high-yield assets like premium HMOs.
The FCA's proposed mortgage rule changes, including relaxed stress testing and easier remortgaging access, have received strong industry support as the consultation period closes. However, experts warn that loosening affordability rules could fuel house price inflation without addressing underlying housing supply issues.
Labour has made reasonable progress on housing reforms after one year, with the Renters' Rights Bill in final stages, leasehold reforms partially enacted, and new affordable housing funding announced, though housebuilding targets are being missed.
Estate agency Nicol & Co is hosting a seminar in Worcestershire on 9 October to help landlords understand the upcoming Renters' Rights Bill and related regulatory changes. The event features expert speakers covering legislation, tax advice, mortgages, and insurance for landlords navigating the changing property landscape.
ARLA Propertymark analysis shows UK rental markets have reached affordability limits with rental growth slowing or reversing in most regions, requiring salaries of £25k-£72k to secure average rentals. Regulatory costs and supply shortage are key drivers preventing meaningful affordability improvements.
Bank of England holds interest rates at 4% amid 3.8% inflation, with industry experts suggesting market stability but limited immediate activity boost, while mortgage products remain at 18-month lows.
Southern England buyers are benefiting most from static/falling house prices combined with lower mortgage rates, saving £106-£181 monthly compared to northern regions where price rises offset mortgage rate benefits.
UK house prices rose 2.8% annually to July 2025 averaging £270k, with strong regional variations (North East +7.9%, London +0.7%). Industry experts highlight cooling demand, affordability pressures, and uncertainty ahead of Autumn Budget affecting market momentum.
Bank of England expected to hold rates at 4% due to persistent 3.8% inflation, with economists suggesting no cuts until early 2025. This reinforces a 'higher for longer' borrowing cost environment for property investors.
The NRLA is advising London buy-to-let landlords to consider investing in northern England due to declining yields in the capital caused by high property values, rising costs, and regulatory pressures.
Buy-to-let mortgage rates have fallen to 3-year lows (4.88% 2-year, 5.21% 5-year) with record product availability, but landlords face mounting pressures from potential tax changes, rising repossessions, and regulatory uncertainty driving record portfolio disposals.
London property has fundamentally shifted from a safe haven investment to underperforming asset class, with central boroughs experiencing real-terms losses since 2016 while facing mounting regulatory and tax pressures.
UK rental market is rebalancing with rental growth at 2.4% now lagging inflation (3.8%), driven by reduced tenant demand, increased supply, and mortgage affordability changes boosting first-time buyers. This marks the weakest rental conditions since 2020.
UK property asking prices rose 0.4% monthly but remain flat year-on-year, with London and South England underperforming while northern regions show growth. Rumoured stamp duty and mansion tax changes create uncertainty, particularly affecting higher-value London properties.
UTB completed a £5.2m regulated bridging loan at 52% LTV to help refinance a £12.75m country estate, providing 12 months for optimal marketing and sale.
Buy-to-let mortgage rates have fallen to three-year lows with 2-year fixed rates at 4.88% and 5-year at 5.21%, while product availability hits record highs. Despite improved financing conditions, landlord selling continues to outpace buying significantly.
Housing minister meets with major banks to strengthen first-time buyer support through recent mortgage reforms, potentially enabling 36,000 additional buyers in year one. Government and lenders collaborating on innovative products and awareness campaigns to increase homeownership access.
GB Bank completed a £2.5m buy-to-let facility to transfer 8 Oxfordshire flats into an SPV structure, highlighting availability of specialist lending for portfolio restructuring and expanded access for foreign nationals.
Mortgage commitments rose 14.6% in Q2 2025 to £78.2bn, the highest since 2022, indicating strong future transaction activity despite current lending volumes being subdued due to stamp duty changes.
High LTV mortgage choice is at a 17-year high with 1,360 products available, while rates have fallen slightly and lenders are relaxing loan-to-income rules following regulatory changes.
Low-deposit mortgage availability has hit 17-year highs with 1,360 options at 90-95% LTV, while average rates have fallen to 4.96% (2-year) and 5.00% (5-year). This improved access to high-LTV financing creates opportunities for leveraged property investment strategies.
Major UK lenders including Barclays, Nationwide, and Virgin Money are increasing mortgage rates by up to 0.2% despite recent base rate cuts, driven by rising long-term borrowing costs and inflation concerns. This marks a turning point that will increase borrowing costs and monthly payments for property investors.
UK house prices hit new record high of £299,331 in August, driven by lower mortgage rates and wage growth, though uncertainty over autumn Budget tax changes may affect near-term market activity.
The FCA is considering relaxing mortgage stress tests to boost homeownership, but UK Finance warns this could increase mortgage arrears and drive up house prices if supply doesn't match increased demand.
Mortgage payments now consume nearly 50% of average gross income, the highest burden since 2008, requiring 50-year terms to achieve affordable payments. House prices have risen 345% since 2000 while wages increased only 237%.
UK Finance predicts mortgage activity will surge in Q3 2025 following Q2 stamp duty-related decline, with June already showing 14% growth in first-time buyer lending and potential FCA affordability test changes supporting future lending.
UK mortgage payments now consume nearly 50% of gross income for average earners - the highest burden since 2008 - as house prices have grown 345% since 2000 versus 237% wage growth. This structural affordability crisis signals potential market correction risks and changing tenant demand dynamics.
Analysis shows parents can save significantly by buying property near universities rather than paying rent, with Glasgow Caledonian University offering the largest savings at £535 per month.
UK house price growth slowed to 2.1% in August as government reportedly considers major property tax reforms including potential stamp duty abolition and National Insurance levy for landlords.
UK house prices fell 0.1% monthly with annual growth softening to 2.1%, driven by affordability pressures, increased supply, and speculation about autumn budget tax changes affecting property transactions.
UK residential transactions rose 4% year-on-year in July to 95,580, showing continued market recovery as sellers adapt pricing expectations and buyers remain active despite economic uncertainties.
Mortgage rates have risen slightly despite recent base rate cuts, driven by increasing swap rates that reflect lenders' expectations of higher long-term funding costs. This highlights the disconnect between base rates and actual borrowing costs for property investors.
Non-dom departures due to April 2025 tax changes have increased prime property supply, with wealthy UK residents using mortgages (not cash) to purchase £5m+ properties, driving a 22% increase in high-value lending. Many departing non-doms are retaining properties as rental investments.
UK mortgage rates have fallen below 5% for the first time since May 2023, with broker confidence improving significantly. Buy-to-let activity remains strong despite upcoming regulatory changes from the Renters' Rights Bill.
Spicerhaart estate agency group reports 8% revenue growth to £136.1m, driven by improved market conditions, rising rental prices, and strong performance across lettings, financial services, and surveying divisions. The company maintains a debt-free position with £22.8m cash reserves for future acquisitions.
Right to Buy sales increased 7% in 2024-25 to 7,494 but remain 32% below 2022-23 levels, with regional variations showing northern markets outpacing southern ones. This reflects broader market confidence recovery following interest rate cuts.
Aspen Bridging completed a £1.57m no-valuation bridge loan at 75% LTV for a Barnet property acquisition, demonstrating how established borrower relationships enable fast competitive purchase completions.
UK house price inflation jumped to 3.7% in June driven by improving mortgage rates and buyer confidence, with strong regional variations and transaction volumes expected to reach 1.1 million in 2025.
UK house prices rose 3.7% annually to June 2025 (average £269k) with strong regional variations, while rental growth continues to ease to 6%, supported by mortgage rate improvements but tempered by inflation concerns.
SKDA completed a £1,030k bridge loan at 63.3% LTV for a complex 41.58-acre site purchase in West Sussex, demonstrating how specialist brokers and responsive lenders can navigate complex mixed-use property deals with retention mechanisms for property issues.
Landlord property purchases dropped by 85,000 (33%) year-on-year to 170,520, with only 6% of UK landlords buying property in the past year due to increased stamp duty, regulatory uncertainty, and higher borrowing costs.
Buy-to-let purchases dropped by 85,000 transactions (33% decline) over the past year, with only 6% of UK's 2.84 million landlords acquiring properties, primarily due to Renters' Rights Bill uncertainty and higher borrowing costs.
Rightmove reports strongest July sales activity since 2020 driven by realistic pricing strategies, with average asking prices down £10,777 over summer but creating a two-speed market where correctly priced homes sell in 32 days vs 99 days for price-reduced properties.
UK property asking prices have dropped £10,000 in three months to £368,740, creating a buyers' market with enhanced negotiating power. Interest rate cuts and improved mortgage affordability are supporting buyer confidence despite the seasonal slowdown.
Bank of England cut base rate from 4.25% to 4% in a close 5-4 vote, the fifth cut in a year. Industry experts expect this to boost buyer confidence, reduce mortgage rates further, and increase transaction activity, though structural issues like stamp duty remain.
Halifax reports 0.4% monthly house price growth to £298,237 average, with Northern Ireland leading at +9.3% annually while London/South East show minimal growth. Experts cite improving affordability but warn of autumn Budget uncertainty.
UK house prices rose 2.4% annually in July with improved affordability as house price-to-earnings ratio hits decade low at 5.75x. Market shows steady recovery with increased buyer activity and expectations of further interest rate cuts.
Industry expert warns that the Chancellor's proposed mortgage lending relaxations could trigger unsustainable house price growth and repeat 2007-08 crash conditions without corresponding housing supply increases. Scottish market data shows it took 9+ years to recover from the last crash.
Three in five landlords faced fixed-rate mortgage expiry in the past two years, with over a third experiencing challenges from higher rates and fees. Portfolio landlords are more likely to switch lenders and seek strategic refinancing solutions.
UK buy-to-let lending surged 38.6% in Q1 2025 with £10.5bn in new loans, driven by falling interest rates (4.99%) and stable yields (6.94%), signaling strong market recovery and improved financing conditions.
UK mortgage rates continue falling with 2-year fixed rates down 0.86% since July 2024 to 5.09%, while lenders relax stress tests and increase product availability. This creates improved financing conditions for property investors across all LTV bands.
Rathbones research shows the 'golden age' of property investment (1980-2016) is over, with UK property barely keeping pace with inflation since 2016 while equities significantly outperformed, suggesting investors should reconsider property-heavy strategies.
Rathbones research shows UK property investment has barely kept pace with inflation since 2016, significantly underperforming equities, marking the end of the 'golden age' of property returns that benefited previous generations.
Research shows 70% of brokers report increased demand for limited company BTL as landlords professionalize their approach in response to tax and regulatory changes. This creates significant opportunities for both brokers and structured portfolio growth.
UK housing market expected to stabilize in H2 2025 after stamp duty disruption, with potential for modest price growth if interest rates fall, but autumn Budget tax rises remain a significant risk.
Two-year mortgage rates have dropped below 5% for the first time since the Liz Truss mini-budget, reaching 4.99%, though experts warn against expecting dramatic further reductions in 2025.
BTL mortgage repossessions increased 11% year-on-year to 790 properties in Q2, with experts warning of squeezed margins forcing portfolio landlords to consider selling up.
RICS July 2025 survey shows housing market flatlining with sales demand and agreed sales turning negative, while rental market faces severe supply shortage with landlord instructions at 5-year lows driving continued rent rises.
RICS July survey shows housing market activity declining with buyer enquiries down 6% and sales down 16%, particularly affecting southern England, while rental demand strengthens due to reduced sales activity.
UTB provided £2.8m residential investment loan to facilitate share transfer acquisition of two properties via company purchase. Demonstrates specialist lender's capability for complex transaction structures.
Foundation Home Loans financed a £660k HMO purchase for a first-time buyer/landlord at 75% LTV, demonstrating specialist lender appetite for complex cases that fall outside standard criteria.
Santander has increased loan-to-income ratios following Treasury rule changes, allowing borrowers to access higher multiples based on income levels. This signals improved buyer affordability and potential increased demand for residential property.
A flat owner cannot sell her leasehold apartment due to fire safety certificate problems and ground rent deed of variation issues, with remediation work not starting until autumn next year and potentially continuing until 2027.
RAW Capital Partners provided a £429k BTL refinance loan at 55% LTV to help a Chinese national exit receivership on their London property, where default arose from communication issues rather than financial weakness.
BoE cuts rates by 0.25% to 4.0% as expected, with experts noting positive impact on buyer activity and mortgage costs, though effects will be gradual given ongoing economic uncertainties.
Renters' ability to save for house deposits has fallen to a six-month low of just 17%, with only 12% believing homeownership is achievable within a year, indicating sustained rental demand and reduced buyer competition for investors.
The Property Franchise Group reported strong H1 2025 growth with 50% revenue increase to £40.3m, driven by increased sales activity and mortgage volumes. The company is launching new services to help landlords adapt to upcoming rental regulations.
UK residential property transactions surged 13% in June 2025 to 93,530, with industry experts attributing this to improved buyer confidence, stable mortgage rates, and increased supply, suggesting sustained market recovery momentum.
Two-year and five-year fixed mortgage rates have converged at 4.52% for the first time since September 2022, with further rate cuts expected following anticipated Bank of England base rate reduction.
Foxtons reports strong H1 2025 results with 10% revenue growth and 31% profit increase, driven by robust lettings performance, but warns of challenging sales market conditions ahead due to high borrowing costs and economic uncertainty.
Remortgaging activity hit a two-year high of 41,800 in June, driven by mortgage maturities from COVID-era and post-mini-budget deals, with experts expecting continued activity as borrowers seek better rates.
UK mortgage approvals and lending activity increased in June with rates falling for the fourth consecutive month to 4.34%, signaling improving market conditions and potential recovery momentum after April's stamp duty changes.
Savills has significantly downgraded UK house price growth from 4% to just 1% for 2025 due to economic uncertainty and geopolitical turbulence, though maintains 24.5% growth over five years. Mixed market signals continue with volatile monthly price movements and transaction activity.
Study reveals widespread pressure on homebuyers to use estate agents' in-house mortgage brokers, with 96% calling for stricter regulation. Younger buyers (25-44) are disproportionately affected by coercive tactics compared to older buyers.
NatWest has committed to implementing PEXA's digital property transaction platform for remortgage cases by H1 2026, with plans to extend to sale and purchase transactions, potentially covering 70% of property transaction types in England and Wales.
Mid-market properties priced £250k-£300k are the only price band showing growth (+31.6% searches year-on-year) despite overall market cooling, suggesting a strategic opportunity for investors to focus on family homes in this price range.
BTL lending surged 38.6% in Q1 2025 with mortgage rates falling to 4.99% and yields rising to 6.94%, signaling a market revival after years of decline. The 'big landlord sell-off' appears to be ending as borrowing costs stabilize.
Private renters have seen monthly costs rise by £221 since 2022 (slightly more than the £218 increase for mortgage holders), with rents now averaging £1,283 vs £1,154 for mortgage payments. Rental inflation is slowing to 4-year lows due to moderating demand and affordability constraints.
SDKA completed a £1.5mn bridge loan at 68% LTV and 1.05% flat rate for an 18-property portfolio in Barnsley, coordinating with the exit lender to streamline the process. The deal demonstrates practical solutions for portfolio investors needing quick refinancing.
Rightmove downgrades 2025 house price growth from 4% to 2% amid decade-high supply levels and current 0.1% annual growth. The market is shifting toward buyers with pricing strategy becoming critical for sellers, particularly in London where asking prices fell 1.5%.
Hamptons has dramatically downgraded 2025 rental growth forecast from 4.5% to 1.0% due to cooling tenant demand, driven by falling mortgage rates enabling more renters to buy and job market weakness. However, structural supply shortages and regulatory changes are expected to drive medium-term rental growth.
UK asking prices fell 1.2% in July (biggest July drop in 20+ years) due to decade-high supply levels, prompting Rightmove to halve its 2025 growth forecast to 2%, though sales activity is paradoxically up 5% year-on-year as competitive pricing attracts buyers.
Hamptons has dramatically cut rental growth forecasts from 4.5% to 1% for 2025 as falling mortgage rates drive tenants to become first-time buyers, reducing rental demand by 11% and causing rents to fall in London, Scotland, and Wales.
Property industry experts report sellers are reducing asking prices to attract buyers in a competitive market, with improved affordability from lower mortgage rates offset by higher stamp duty costs.
Industry professional discusses current buy-to-let lending trends, highlighting that experienced portfolio landlords with HMOs and energy-efficient properties are finding most success, while emphasizing the need for early preparation in refinancing.
Growing numbers of friends and non-couples are co-buying properties in London to overcome affordability barriers, with major lenders reporting increased interest in non-traditional mortgage arrangements. Examples include friends pooling resources to buy £450k-£650k properties they couldn't afford individually.
Q2 2025 rental barometer shows strong rental growth of 2.9% quarterly average with yields steady at 7.5%, led by North East (+21.8%) and Wales (+7.8%), while landlord portfolios continue expanding to average 10 properties.
Analysis shows loan-to-income ratios are significantly higher in London and South East (3.65x) compared to Northern England (under 3.2x), with outer London postcodes reaching 4.16x, indicating lenders' increased appetite for higher-risk lending in expensive markets.
The government will announce 'Freedom to Buy', a permanent mortgage guarantee scheme supporting 95% LTV mortgages with lenders paying fees to Treasury for guarantees. This replaces the expired pandemic-era scheme and aims to support first-time buyers.
Regulators have raised the threshold for loan-to-income mortgage limits from £100m to £150m, exempting around 80 smaller lenders from the 15% cap on high LTI lending. Industry bodies are calling for further relaxation to support more borrowers.
Regulators have raised the threshold for mortgage LTI flow limits from £100m to £150m annual lending, exempting more smaller lenders from restrictions. This may improve mortgage availability but falls short of industry calls for broader lending capacity increases.
UK house prices remained flat in June at £296,665 but are up 2.5% year-on-year, with industry experts noting market resilience and return of first-time buyers post-stamp duty changes. Regional variations show strongest growth in Northern Ireland (9.6%) and weakest in South West, creating buyer's market conditions especially in southern England.
Online remortgage searches dropped 10% in June as property investors and homeowners delay refinancing decisions, waiting for an expected 0.25% base rate cut in July. This 'wait and see' approach reflects growing confidence that rates will continue falling through 2024.
First-time buyer mortgage LTVs have risen significantly to 77.1% (from 74.7% in Q1 2024), driven by reduced ability to save deposits due to rising rents caused by landlord exodus and rental supply constraints. Scotland shows highest LTVs at 82.4% with fastest growth in East Anglia, South East, and London.
The Mortgage Works has cut buy-to-let rates by up to 0.35%, offering competitive rates from 2.79% across various products including standard BTL, limited company, and HMO mortgages. This demonstrates improved lending conditions and competitive pricing for landlords seeking financing.
ONP Solicitors processed a record 5,000+ remortgage deals in a single day, signaling accelerating remortgage market activity driven by expiring fixed-rate deals and attractive new rates, with an even larger spike expected in October.
UK house prices fell 0.8% in June 2024, the biggest monthly decline in over two years, partly attributed to weaker demand following April's stamp duty threshold reductions, though experts expect the market to recover.
Santander and Zephyr Homeloans have cut buy-to-let mortgage rates, with Santander offering rates from 3.99% and Zephyr from 2.69%, though Zephyr charges significantly higher 7% fees.
RAW Capital Partners has increased its maximum BTL LTV from 55% to 70% for expat and overseas borrowers, demonstrating this with a £350,000 loan to a Shanghai-based UK expat couple for a North London property.
UK house price growth has slowed to 1.4% due to increased housing supply creating a buyer's market, with properties taking an average 45 days to sell and over one-fifth remaining unsold after six months. Industry experts emphasize the need for realistic pricing and note investor hesitancy due to regulatory uncertainty.
IMLA research reveals 3.5 million potential homebuyers have been blocked from purchasing since the financial crisis due to overly stringent mortgage regulations, particularly LTI flow limits, despite many being able to afford mortgage payments.
UK residential transactions rose 25% month-on-month in May 2025 to 81,470, showing market recovery after April's dip, though still 12% down year-on-year. Industry experts highlight market resilience despite economic uncertainty and extended completion times.
The Stafford Building Society launches a 2-year buy-to-let mortgage at 3.05% to 70% LTV with a 5% arrangement fee, accepting holiday let and Airbnb income.
BTL mortgage product availability hits record high at 4,144 deals while average two-year fixed rates drop below 5% for first time since September 2022, creating improved financing conditions for landlords.
Northern Ireland house prices rose 10% annually in Q1 2025 to £185k average, driven by stamp duty threshold reduction from £250k to £125k and falling interest rates. All areas and property types saw increases, with some coastal areas reaching pre-2007 levels.
RAAC concrete found in 900 Dundee properties is forcing private homeowners to face hefty repair bills, blocking sales and derailing retirement plans, while council tenants receive protection.
A simple guide to using the Mortgage Calculator for estimating mortgage payments.