House price growth may offset easing mortgage costs

New analysis from Moneyfactscompare suggests that easing mortgage rates could support modest house price growth in 2026 without significantly improving or worsening affordability for first-time buyers and home movers.

The findings, based on consumer mortgage comparisons made on Moneyfactscompare.co.uk in 2025 alongside Moneyfacts average mortgage rate data, indicate that lower borrowing costs may help sustain demand even as prices edge higher.

First-time buyers

+ Typical first-time buyers borrowed around £236,000 in 2025

+ Average property value of around £310,000

+ Average loan-to-value (LTV) of 78% // Avg deposit of 22% 

Homemovers

+ Typical homemover borrowed around £251,000 in 2025

+ Average property value of around £466,000

+ Average LTV of 58% // 42% equity

Remortgage borrowers

+ Typical remortgage customer borrowed around £215,000

+ Typical property value of around £460,000

+ Average LTV of 50% // 50% equity

Average mortgage rates

Markets currently predict the Bank of England will lower the Base Rate from 3.75% to 3.25%-3.5% this year.

Product / Scenario

1 Jan 2026

End of 2026

90% LTV 2-yr fix

5.09%

4.80%

80% LTV 2-yr fix

4.80%

4.50%

60% LTV 2-yr fix

4.28%

4.00%

First-time buyer at 80% LTV

Borrow £236,000 → £1,352 per month

Borrow £241,900 → £1,345p er month

Homemover at 60% LTV

Borrow £251,000 → £1,364 per month

Borrow £257,275 → £1,358 per month

Remortgage at 60% LTV

Borrow £215,000 → £1,168per month

Borrow £215,000 → £1,135 per month

Source: Moneyfacts. Average mortgage rates assume a 0.25 percentage point Base Rate cut. Mortgage repayments assume repayments over 25 years. FTB and homemover figures assume 2.5% annual house price growth as forecasted by OBR.

Adam French, of Moneyfactscompare, said: “After more than three years of higher borrowing costs, even small cuts in mortgage rates can have a meaningful effect on buyer behaviour. With markets expecting at least one further 0.25 percentage point cut to the Base Rate, the mortgage landscape in 2026 may be more forgiving than at any point since 2021.

“Our modelling suggests that easing rates may make modest house price growth possible without stretching affordability further, an important shift after the intense affordability squeeze of 2022–2025.

“First-time buyers still face the steepest challenges, with many stretching to higher LTV deals given the need to save a considerable deposit. In contrast remortgage borrowers – who typically hold far more equity and are unlikely to need to borrow more – stand to benefit most from easing rates.

“Any expectation of more substantial growth should be tempered by the fact that borrowing costs remain well above the ultra-low levels of the 2010s. Even with rate cuts, affordability remains tight.

“Lower rates remove a headwind rather than create a tailwind, making modest house price growth possible, but not guaranteeing it. Unless rates fall further or incomes rise faster than expected the headroom for growth is likely to remain tight.”

 

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