DATA | MORTGAGES | BANK OF ENGLAND SOURCE
TL;DR
The average two-year fixed mortgage rate was 4.81% in May 2026 -- up 0.74 percentage points year-on-year. The Standard Variable Rate (SVR) was 6.60%. UK household debt was 117.5% of disposable income in Q4 2025. Individual insolvencies in Q1 2026 were 20.4% higher than Q1 2025. Sources: Bank of England, Insolvency Service, House of Commons Library (June 2026).
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Key figures -- May/June 2026
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UK mortgage rates in 2026: fixed vs variable
The Bank of England base rate has fallen from its 5.25% peak but remains significantly above pre-2022 levels. This has kept mortgage rates elevated for both new borrowers and those rolling off fixed deals. In May 2026, the average two-year fixed rate was 4.81% -- more than three times the average rate available in early 2021. For a borrower with a £200,000 repayment mortgage over 25 years, this represents an additional monthly cost of approximately £290 compared to a 1.5% rate.
The SVR (Standard Variable Rate) is the rate lenders charge automatically when a fixed or tracker deal expires. At 6.60% in May 2026, borrowers who roll onto the SVR face significantly higher costs than those who remortgage to a new fixed deal. Around 800,000 fixed-rate mortgage deals expire each year -- borrowers approaching the end of a fixed term should review options well in advance.
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Chart 1: UK mortgage rates -- 2-year fixed vs SVR (2021 to May 2026) Average rates. Source: Bank of England Statistical Database. Dashed line = SVR. |
UK household debt levels
UK household debt has fallen from its peak of 155.8% of disposable income in Q3 2008 to 117.5% in Q4 2025. While the direction is positive, the absolute level remains high by historical standards. Mortgage debt accounts for the largest share -- approximately £30,574 per adult on average. Unsecured consumer debt (credit cards, personal loans, overdrafts) averages £4,022 per adult.
The total interest cost of UK household debt is approximately £171 million per day. The elevated mortgage rate environment has significantly increased the cost of this debt for those on variable rates or rolling off fixed deals, contributing to rising financial stress and insolvency numbers across 2025 and 2026.
Individual insolvencies and financial stress Q1 2026
Individual insolvencies are closely correlated with mortgage rate rises and household debt stress. Q1 2026 saw 35,143 individual insolvencies -- a 20.4% increase on Q1 2025. This reflects the cumulative impact of three years of elevated mortgage rates, sustained energy and food price inflation, and the gradual removal of COVID-era financial support measures. The rise in Debt Relief Orders to record levels suggests that the financial pressure is concentrated among lower-income households who have little buffer against cost increases.
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Chart 2: Individual insolvencies per quarter -- England and Wales (Q1 2024 to Q1 2026) Provisional quarterly totals. Source: Insolvency Service (OGL v3.0); House of Commons Library. |
What happens when a fixed mortgage deal ends?
When a fixed-rate mortgage expires, borrowers automatically move to the lender's Standard Variable Rate unless they remortgage to a new deal. With the SVR at 6.60% in May 2026, this can represent a significant payment increase for borrowers who fixed at rates below 2% in 2020 or 2021. For example, a borrower moving from a 1.5% fixed rate to a 6.60% SVR on a £200,000 mortgage over 20 years would see their monthly payment rise from approximately £966 to approximately £1,486 -- an increase of £520 per month.
Borrowers can typically begin arranging a new fixed deal up to six months before the current deal expires. A mortgage broker can search across multiple lenders to find the most competitive rate. Read the UK mortgage hub for current fixed rate options and remortgaging guides.
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Related guides |
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Disclaimer: Mortgage rate data is sourced from the Bank of England Statistical Database. Household debt data is from ONS UK Economic Accounts. All figures are subject to revision. This page is for general information only and does not constitute financial or mortgage advice. Always seek independent financial advice before making mortgage decisions. |
Frequently asked questions
What is the current average mortgage rate in the UK?
The average two-year fixed mortgage rate in the UK was 4.81% in May 2026, according to the Bank of England. The average five-year fixed rate is typically slightly lower. The SVR (Standard Variable Rate) -- the rate borrowers revert to when their deal expires -- was 6.60% in May 2026. Rates vary significantly by loan-to-value ratio, with lower LTVs attracting better rates.
What is the SVR and why does it matter?
The SVR (Standard Variable Rate) is the default rate a mortgage lender charges when a fixed or tracker deal ends. It is set by the lender, not the Bank of England, and can change at any time. At 6.60% in May 2026, it is significantly higher than most fixed-rate deals currently available. Borrowers who do not actively remortgage when their fixed deal expires will automatically move onto the SVR, often resulting in substantially higher monthly payments.
How does household debt affect insolvency rates?
High household debt levels increase vulnerability to financial shocks such as job loss, interest rate rises or unexpected costs. The sustained rise in mortgage rates since 2022 has materially increased the monthly cost of debt for millions of UK households, contributing to the 20.4% increase in individual insolvencies in Q1 2026 compared to Q1 2025. The correlation between mortgage rate rises and insolvency increases is well-established historically, with similar patterns observed following the 2008-09 financial crisis.
When will UK mortgage rates come down?
Mortgage rates are influenced by the Bank of England base rate, swap rates and lender competition. The Bank of England base rate peaked at 5.25% in August 2023 and has been reduced since. However, swap rates -- which determine the cost of fixed-rate funding for lenders -- remain elevated relative to pre-2022 levels, keeping fixed mortgage rates above 4%. The Bank of England's next monetary policy meeting and the outlook for UK inflation will be key factors. Read the UK mortgage hub for the latest rate analysis.
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Primary Sources |