Mortgage Question (3 Viewers)

Wyken Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
Just bought a house and managed to get a five year fixed rate with Santander at 2.79%. It won't be my forever home so nearly went for a two year deal, glad I didn't in the end!

I guess during a 25 year term most if not all of us are going to have some turbulence? People keep mentioning the early 90s when interest rates went up to circa 18%, but house prices and affordability means testing was different back then

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shmmeee

Well-Known Member
One good thing is it’ll finally shut up all the boomers and their “house prices? Bah! Check muh interest rates!” Nonsense
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
Just bought a house and managed to get a five year fixed rate with Santander at 2.79%. It won't be my forever home so nearly went for a two year deal, glad I didn't in the end!

I guess during a 25 year term most if not all of us are going to have some turbulence? People keep mentioning the early 90s when interest rates went up to circa 18%, but house prices and affordability means testing was different back then

Sent from my Pixel 6 using Tapatalk
Turbulance is also easier to absorb as your debt comes down thanks to repayment and also inflation making it relatively less. It's the early years that are the challenge.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Sorry lads this is all my fault.

First time I bought was 2007, second house post divorce just last year.

I promise to rent from here on out.
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
Just bought a house and managed to get a five year fixed rate with Santander at 2.79%. It won't be my forever home so nearly went for a two year deal, glad I didn't in the end!

I guess during a 25 year term most if not all of us are going to have some turbulence? People keep mentioning the early 90s when interest rates went up to circa 18%, but house prices and affordability means testing was different back then

Sent from my Pixel 6 using Tapatalk
That's a very good deal .
In the nineties when selling during the after effects the purchaser's mortgage/bank would only front 75% of the asking price .
Knocking around 30k off what it was marketed at, luckily the one we went for for had dropped 40% as it had been on the market for a considerable time.
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
Still unsure whether to proceed myself... the gamble would be to sell and move into rented accomodation, then have the capital to swoop if prices crash a bit.
 

Mr Panda

Well-Known Member
Started the remortgage process 6 months early and locked in at 1.41% for 5 years, felt great at the time and a little smug about getting in there before the BoE raised the base rate...but now 5 years feels like nothing given the shit show we're in.

Going to overpay as much as I can whilst I can, assuming I'll probably not get that low a percentage in 2027
 
Started the remortgage process 6 months early and locked in at 1.41% for 5 years, felt great at the time and a little smug about getting in there before the BoE raised the base rate...but now 5 years feels like nothing given the shit show we're in.

Going to overpay as much as I can whilst I can, assuming I'll probably not get that low a percentage in 2027

Hi Mr Panda. What are your thoughts on Adam allegedly cheating on Paige. He’s flew off to Bali now without her. Also the Ferne and Sam drama keeps getting worse
 

Sky Blue Pete

Well-Known Member
Started the remortgage process 6 months early and locked in at 1.41% for 5 years, felt great at the time and a little smug about getting in there before the BoE raised the base rate...but now 5 years feels like nothing given the shit show we're in.

Going to overpay as much as I can whilst I can, assuming I'll probably not get that low a percentage in 2027
Without a crystal ball or being mates with the chancellor financial activity is competent guesswork
 

robbiekeane

Well-Known Member
Started the remortgage process 6 months early and locked in at 1.41% for 5 years, felt great at the time and a little smug about getting in there before the BoE raised the base rate...but now 5 years feels like nothing given the shit show we're in.

Going to overpay as much as I can whilst I can, assuming I'll probably not get that low a percentage in 2027
That’s fantastic. I wish I’d have went for 5 years, I got something similar at 3 years
 

SkyBlueScottie

Well-Known Member
Started the remortgage process 6 months early and locked in at 1.41% for 5 years, felt great at the time and a little smug about getting in there before the BoE raised the base rate...but now 5 years feels like nothing given the shit show we're in.

Going to overpay as much as I can whilst I can, assuming I'll probably not get that low a percentage in 2027

I've just locked in for 5 years, at 4% though, was a few months too late! However I was on the SVR so its about £50 cheaper per month. It seems the "experts" are predicting this too last for about 3 years, so fingers crossed. However within that they are probably hedging bets on a change in govt / policy.
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
I've just locked in for 5 years, at 4% though, was a few months too late! However I was on the SVR so its about £50 cheaper per month. It seems the "experts" are predicting this too last for about 3 years, so fingers crossed. However within that they are probably hedging bets on a change in govt / policy.
Can't be certain but have feeling we had a 5% fixed 5yr in 92-3 and from memory we were back above the variable rate 2-3 years in .
 

OffenhamSkyBlue

Well-Known Member
Sorry lads this is all my fault.

First time I bought was 2007, second house post divorce just last year.

I promise to rent from here on out.
Don't do that Shmmeee - your rent will still go up if the landlord's mortgage increases (and even if it doesn't), and you will no assets to show for shelling out the dosh. Always mortgage if you can
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Don't do that Shmmeee - your rent will still go up if the landlord's mortgage increases (and even if it doesn't), and you will no assets to show for shelling out the dosh. Always mortgage if you can

Don’t worry, if I really had the power to crash the financial system at will I could think of much better ways to use it.
 

Mr Panda

Well-Known Member
Hi Mr Panda. What are your thoughts on Adam allegedly cheating on Paige. He’s flew off to Bali now without her. Also the Ferne and Sam drama keeps getting worse

I saw the video of Adam with that blonde girl on the socials and I have to admit I was dismayed. Paige deserves better
 

stay_up_skyblues

Well-Known Member
Average rate just under 7% as of today 😳 we bought our first house in July but only thanks to a family member “gifting” (I’ve paid him back, don’t tell the bank) the rest of our deposit to get the ideal house that came up. Otherwise we were aiming to have completed on somewhere by Christmas. We’d be somewhere a lot smaller at that rate, if we got accepted at all.
 

Astute

Well-Known Member
Just bought a house and managed to get a five year fixed rate with Santander at 2.79%. It won't be my forever home so nearly went for a two year deal, glad I didn't in the end!

I guess during a 25 year term most if not all of us are going to have some turbulence? People keep mentioning the early 90s when interest rates went up to circa 18%, but house prices and affordability means testing was different back then

Sent from my Pixel 6 using Tapatalk
Long term fixed rates when the rate is low is always the best way. If you need to move you shouldn't have to pay any redemption fee as long as the amount you borrow doesn't go down for your next property and you stay with your current lender.
 

robbiekeane

Well-Known Member
Long term fixed rates when the rate is low is always the best way. If you need to move you shouldn't have to pay any redemption fee as long as the amount you borrow doesn't go down for your next property and you stay with your current lender.
I renewed early and for 3 years at 1.39% in January 2022 because it was basically free money. I wish I’d have fixed for 5 years
 

Nick

Administrator
Bump

Gone from 2.5% up to 6% now that the fixed term has run out.

Do I want a couple of months and try for lower rates or remortgage ASAP?

Any recommendations for brokers?
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
Bump

Gone from 2.5% up to 6% now that the fixed term has run out.

Do I want a couple of months and try for lower rates or remortgage ASAP?

Any recommendations for brokers?
I renewed mine recently, did speak to a broker who suggested that things were getting a bit better and better fixed deals were coming into the market. I managed to renew and get 3.95% fixed for a couple of years (was 2.6% prior), it's a decent bit extra per month but gives the opportunity to get out when the rates improve again which they are expected to.

Didn't actually go with a deal the broker offered as found when I logged on to a Principality that the deal available online was better than in their letter and better than any my broker found.
 

Nick

Administrator
Just spoken to somebody who's getting some offers. Although to fix for 3 years now my monthly payment will be the pretty much the same as svr now my fixed period is over. (Keeping the same term etc)

Just depends if svr is going to keep going up...
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
Just spoken to somebody who's getting some offers. Although to fix for 3 years now my monthly payment will be the pretty much the same as svr now my fixed period is over. (Keeping the same term etc)

Just depends if svr is going to keep going up...
I'd tend to head for fix regardless, in that you know what you're paying each month then, and can budget around that. The financial runes suggest choppy waters for another year or so, so if you were a gambling man you'd bet on them coming down after that and it balancing out, or even you end up in profit.

But if it doesn't sort itself out...
 

Mild-Mannered Janitor

Kindest Bloke on CCFC / Maker of CCFC Dreams
Our deal - fixed rate - up in Dec...
Just had call with broker - looking at going from paying 850 to 1300 per month over a further extended period!...on the best deal WHAT THE F**K!!??
Get a new broker, that doesn’t sound a good deal unless you were on a 1% mortgage rate before.

use the money supermarket sites on your own research, agents still make money, having said that, i research myself and then use London and country to see if they can better.
most agents I’ll ask you what you want, ie 3, 5, fixed etc so if you define too much, it limits the deals and other thing to consider is how much of the available market that agent can actually look at, very few are capable of having access to 95% of products available so you are only getting the best of what they can offer.
 

Robinshio

Well-Known Member
Inflation will be 2% by the end of the year. Interest rates will then go down. Not the time for a long fix. Up to 2 years max for security
 

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