Mortgage affordability could be on course to return to its most manageable level in almost five years, according to exclusive new analysis from INTEREST by Moneyfacts, as easing rates and rising incomes restore some breathing space for borrowers.
The research shows that average mortgage payments, which peaked at close to half of gross monthly income in 2024, could fall back towards 40-41% of the average gross salary later this year, a level last seen in 2021. If average mortgage rates settle around 4.25-4.50%, based on current assumptions.
INTEREST by Moneyfacts’ analysis of historic and projected mortgage costs shows:
- June 2024: Average mortgage payments hit a peak of 49.1% of a typical gross monthly salary
- June 2025: That figure fell to 45.1%
- June 2026 affordability outlook:
- 40.7% at a 4.25% average mortgage rate
- 41.8% at a 4.50% average mortgage rate
This marks a significant improvement from the affordability squeeze seen in 2023 and 2024, when sharp rate rises pushed monthly mortgage affordability to its limits or beyond for many households.
Why affordability is improving
The improvement is being supported by a more stable economic background:
- Pay growth is expected to remain resilient, with businesses budgeting for around 3.2% wage rises(1)
- House price growth is forecast to moderate to around 2.5%, easing pressure on buyers(2)
- Inflation is expected to move back towards the Bank of England’s 2% target(3)
Together, these trends should allow mortgage costs to ease without reigniting runaway house price inflation.
Why ultra-low rates are not the answer
While calls for rapid Base Rate cuts often focus on helping borrowers, Moneyfacts’ historic rates data shows that cutting rates too far risks storing up future affordability problems.
During previous periods of ultra-low rates, cheap borrowing encouraged more capital to flow into property, pushing prices up faster than wages. Any short-term relief from lower monthly payments was quickly absorbed by higher house prices and left first-time buyers worse off once rates normalised.
A more balanced, ‘neutral’ Base Rate supports borrowers without punishing savers, helping to deliver sustainable affordability rather than another boom-and-bust cycle.
Adam French, Head of Consumer Finance at Moneyfacts, said:
“Mortgage rates are easing, but the era of ever-cheaper borrowing is firmly behind us. Many fixed rate lenders will have already factored forecast rates cuts into their product pricing to some extent and just how far mortgage rates will fall remains to be seen. However, mortgage affordability is moving in the right direction, and that will come as a real relief to borrowers who have endured a few really tough years.
“INTEREST by Moneyfacts analysis shows that a balanced Base Rate can deliver genuine breathing space for borrowers while keeping house price growth in check. But this should not be mistaken for a return to the era of ultra-low interest rates
“First-time buyers in particular stand to benefit from improving affordability but only if house price inflation stays in check. Cutting rates too far risks pumping excess capital back into the housing market, inflating prices and undoing the very affordability gains many buyers and borrowers are hoping for. The challenge for the Bank of England is balance between supporting borrowers, rewarding savers fairly, and avoiding the mistakes that made homes increasingly unaffordable in the past.”
|
Date
|
Gross monthly salary (ONS)
|
Average house price (Land Registry)
|
Moneyfacts Average Mortgage rate
|
Average Monthly mortgage payment*
|
Share of gross monthly salary (%)
|
|
Jun 2020
|
£2,303.31
|
£216,208.00
|
2.17%
|
£849.00
|
36.86%
|
|
Jun 2021
|
£2,502.35
|
£242,777.00
|
2.72%
|
£1,008.00
|
40.28%
|
|
Jun 2022
|
£2,658.87
|
£258,118.00
|
3.30%
|
£1,132.00
|
42.57%
|
|
Jun 2023
|
£2,901.88
|
£258,275.00
|
5.34%
|
£1,393.00
|
48.00%
|
|
Jun 2024
|
£2,993.35
|
£259,605.00
|
5.76%
|
£1,470.00
|
49.11%
|
|
Jun 2025
|
£3,138.69
|
£269,079.00
|
5.12%
|
£1,416.00
|
45.11%
|
|
Jul 2025
|
£3,159.33
|
£269,735
|
5.11%
|
£1,419.00
|
44.91%
|
|
Aug 2025
|
£3,176.00
|
£272,114.00
|
5.04%
|
£1,432.00
|
45.09%
|
|
Sep 2025
|
£3,180.67
|
£270,152
|
5.00%
|
£1,421.00
|
44.68%
|
|
Oct 2025
|
£3,202.33
|
£269,862.00
|
5.01%
|
£1,420.00
|
44.34%
|
|
Nov 2025
|
£3,212.66
|
£271,188
|
4.99%
|
£1,444.00
|
44.95%
|
|
2026: lower range average rate**
|
£3,315.20
|
£276,609
|
4.25%
|
£1,349.00
|
40.69%
|
|
2026: upper range average rate**
|
£3,315.20
|
£276,609
|
4.5%
|
£1,384.00
|
41.75%
|
Sources: Moneyfacts Analyser, ONS & Land Registry
*Capital repayment mortgage over 25 years with a 10% deposit using the Bank of England borrowing calculator
**Potential affordability is subject to the average mortgage rate reaching the quoted figure. Forecast assumes 2.5% house price growth and 3.2% salary increase.
(1) Economic Evidence to the Pay Review Bodies 2026-27 Pay Round
(2) & (3) OBR economic and fiscal outlook, Nov 2025
Read more in the latest issue of the INTEREST journal, which you can read for free here. Part or all of this press release can be reproduced, so long as we are sufficiently sourced.
- ENDS
INTEREST is dispatched in advance of meetings of The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee and is distributed free of charge.
To receive the latest issue and sign up please visit: https://www.moneyfactsgroup.co.uk/magazines-and-reports/interest/
Have an opinion? Letters to the Editor invited:
interest@moneyfacts.co.uk
Mortgage affordability could be on course to return to its most manageable level in almost five years, according to exclusive new analysis from INTEREST by Moneyfacts, as easing rates and rising incomes restore some breathing space for borrowers.
The research shows that average mortgage payments, which peaked at close to half of gross monthly income in 2024, could fall back towards 40-41% of the average gross salary later this year, a level last seen in 2021. If average mortgage rates settle around 4.25-4.50%, based on current assumptions.
INTEREST by Moneyfacts’ analysis of historic and projected mortgage costs shows:
- June 2024: Average mortgage payments hit a peak of 49.1% of a typical gross monthly salary
- June 2025: That figure fell to 45.1%
- June 2026 affordability outlook:
- 40.7% at a 4.25% average mortgage rate
- 41.8% at a 4.50% average mortgage rate
This marks a significant improvement from the affordability squeeze seen in 2023 and 2024, when sharp rate rises pushed monthly mortgage affordability to its limits or beyond for many households.
Why affordability is improving
The improvement is being supported by a more stable economic background:
- Pay growth is expected to remain resilient, with businesses budgeting for around 3.2% wage rises(1)
- House price growth is forecast to moderate to around 2.5%, easing pressure on buyers(2)
- Inflation is expected to move back towards the Bank of England’s 2% target(3)
Together, these trends should allow mortgage costs to ease without reigniting runaway house price inflation.
Why ultra-low rates are not the answer
While calls for rapid Base Rate cuts often focus on helping borrowers, Moneyfacts’ historic rates data shows that cutting rates too far risks storing up future affordability problems.
During previous periods of ultra-low rates, cheap borrowing encouraged more capital to flow into property, pushing prices up faster than wages. Any short-term relief from lower monthly payments was quickly absorbed by higher house prices and left first-time buyers worse off once rates normalised.
A more balanced, ‘neutral’ Base Rate supports borrowers without punishing savers, helping to deliver sustainable affordability rather than another boom-and-bust cycle.
Adam French, Head of Consumer Finance at Moneyfacts, said:
“Mortgage rates are easing, but the era of ever-cheaper borrowing is firmly behind us. Many fixed rate lenders will have already factored forecast rates cuts into their product pricing to some extent and just how far mortgage rates will fall remains to be seen. However, mortgage affordability is moving in the right direction, and that will come as a real relief to borrowers who have endured a few really tough years.
“INTEREST by Moneyfacts analysis shows that a balanced Base Rate can deliver genuine breathing space for borrowers while keeping house price growth in check. But this should not be mistaken for a return to the era of ultra-low interest rates
“First-time buyers in particular stand to benefit from improving affordability but only if house price inflation stays in check. Cutting rates too far risks pumping excess capital back into the housing market, inflating prices and undoing the very affordability gains many buyers and borrowers are hoping for. The challenge for the Bank of England is balance between supporting borrowers, rewarding savers fairly, and avoiding the mistakes that made homes increasingly unaffordable in the past.”
|
Date
|
Gross monthly salary (ONS)
|
Average house price (Land Registry)
|
Moneyfacts Average Mortgage rate
|
Average Monthly mortgage payment*
|
Share of gross monthly salary (%)
|
|
Jun 2020
|
£2,303.31
|
£216,208.00
|
2.17%
|
£849.00
|
36.86%
|
|
Jun 2021
|
£2,502.35
|
£242,777.00
|
2.72%
|
£1,008.00
|
40.28%
|
|
Jun 2022
|
£2,658.87
|
£258,118.00
|
3.30%
|
£1,132.00
|
42.57%
|
|
Jun 2023
|
£2,901.88
|
£258,275.00
|
5.34%
|
£1,393.00
|
48.00%
|
|
Jun 2024
|
£2,993.35
|
£259,605.00
|
5.76%
|
£1,470.00
|
49.11%
|
|
Jun 2025
|
£3,138.69
|
£269,079.00
|
5.12%
|
£1,416.00
|
45.11%
|
|
Jul 2025
|
£3,159.33
|
£269,735
|
5.11%
|
£1,419.00
|
44.91%
|
|
Aug 2025
|
£3,176.00
|
£272,114.00
|
5.04%
|
£1,432.00
|
45.09%
|
|
Sep 2025
|
£3,180.67
|
£270,152
|
5.00%
|
£1,421.00
|
44.68%
|
|
Oct 2025
|
£3,202.33
|
£269,862.00
|
5.01%
|
£1,420.00
|
44.34%
|
|
Nov 2025
|
£3,212.66
|
£271,188
|
4.99%
|
£1,444.00
|
44.95%
|
|
2026: lower range average rate**
|
£3,315.20
|
£276,609
|
4.25%
|
£1,349.00
|
40.69%
|
|
2026: upper range average rate**
|
£3,315.20
|
£276,609
|
4.5%
|
£1,384.00
|
41.75%
|
Sources: Moneyfacts Analyser, ONS & Land Registry
*Capital repayment mortgage over 25 years with a 10% deposit using the Bank of England borrowing calculator
**Potential affordability is subject to the average mortgage rate reaching the quoted figure. Forecast assumes 2.5% house price growth and 3.2% salary increase.
(1) Economic Evidence to the Pay Review Bodies 2026-27 Pay Round
(2) & (3) OBR economic and fiscal outlook, Nov 2025
Read more in the latest issue of the INTEREST journal, which you can read for free here. Part or all of this press release can be reproduced, so long as we are sufficiently sourced.
- ENDS
INTEREST is dispatched in advance of meetings of The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee and is distributed free of charge.
To receive the latest issue and sign up please visit: https://www.moneyfactsgroup.co.uk/magazines-and-reports/interest/
Have an opinion? Letters to the Editor invited:
interest@moneyfacts.co.uk