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TwitterMortgage rates surged at an unprecedented pace in 2022, with the average 10-year fixed rate doubling between March and December of that year. In response to mounting inflation, the Bank of England implemented a series of rate hikes, pushing borrowing costs steadily higher. By October 2025, the average 10-year fixed mortgage rate stood at **** percent. As financing becomes more expensive, housing demand has cooled, weighing on market sentiment and slowing house price growth. How have the mortgage hikes affected the market? After surging in 2021, the number of residential properties sold fell significantly in 2023, dipping to just above *** million transactions. This contraction in activity also dampened mortgage lending. Between the first quarter of 2023 and the first quarter of 2024, the value of new mortgage loans declined year-on-year for five consecutive quarters. Even as rates eased modestly in 2024 and housing activity picked up slightly, volumes remained well below the highs recorded in 2021. How are higher mortgages impacting homebuyers? For homeowners, the impact is being felt most acutely as fixed-rate deals expire. Mortgage terms in the UK typically range from two to ten years, and many borrowers who locked in historically low rates are now facing significantly higher repayments when refinancing. By the end of 2026, an estimated five million homeowners will see their mortgage deals expire. Roughly two million of these loans are projected to experience a monthly payment increase of up to *** British pounds by 2026, putting additional pressure on household budgets and constraining affordability across the market.
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Mortgage Rate in the United Kingdom remained unchanged at 6.78 percent in October. This dataset provides - United Kingdom BBA Mortgage Rate- actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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TwitterThe 10 largest mortgage lenders in the United Kingdom accounted for approximately 83 percent of the total market, with the top three alone accounting for 48 percent in 2024. Lloyds Banking Group had the largest market share of gross mortgage lending, with nearly 47 billion British pounds in lending in 2024. HSBC, which is the largest UK bank by total assets, ranked fifth. Development of the mortgage market In 2024, the value of outstanding in mortgage lending to individuals amounted to 1.6 trillion British pounds. Although this figure has continuously increased in the past, the UK mortgage market declined dramatically in 2024, registering the lowest value of mortgage lending since 2015. In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic caused the market to contract for the first time since 2012. The next two years saw mortgage lending soar due to pent-up demand, but as interest rates soared, the housing market cooled, leading to a decrease in new loans of about 100 billion British pounds. The end of low interest rates In 2021, mortgage rates saw some of their lowest levels since recording began by the Bank of England. For a long time, this was particularly good news for first-time homebuyers and those remortgaging their property. Nevertheless, due to the rising inflation, mortgage rates started to rise in the second half of the year, resulting in the 10-year rate doubling in 2022.
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Mortgage Approvals in the United Kingdom decreased to 65.02 Thousand in October from 65.65 Thousand in September of 2025. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - United Kingdom Mortgage Approvals - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.
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TwitterPolicy interest rates in the U.S. and Europe are forecasted to decrease gradually between 2024 and 2027, following exceptional increases triggered by soaring inflation between 2021 and 2023. The U.S. federal funds rate stood at **** percent at the end of 2023, the European Central Bank deposit rate at **** percent, and the Swiss National Bank policy rate at **** percent. With inflationary pressures stabilizing, policy interest rates are forecast to decrease in each observed region. The U.S. federal funds rate is expected to decrease to *** percent, the ECB refi rate to **** percent, the Bank of England bank rate to **** percent, and the Swiss National Bank policy rate to **** percent by 2025. An interesting aspect to note is the impact of these interest rate changes on various economic factors such as growth, employment, and inflation. The impact of central bank policy rates The U.S. federal funds effective rate, crucial in determining the interest rate paid by depository institutions, experienced drastic changes in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The subsequent slight changes in the effective rate reflected the efforts to stimulate the economy and manage economic factors such as inflation. Such fluctuations in the federal funds rate have had a significant impact on the overall economy. The European Central Bank's decision to cut its fixed interest rate in June 2024 for the first time since 2016 marked a significant shift in attitude towards economic conditions. The reasons behind the fluctuations in the ECB's interest rate reflect its mandate to ensure price stability and manage inflation, shedding light on the complex interplay between interest rates and economic factors. Inflation and real interest rates The relationship between inflation and interest rates is critical in understanding the actions of central banks. Central banks' efforts to manage inflation through interest rate adjustments reveal the intricate balance between economic growth and inflation. Additionally, the concept of real interest rates, adjusted for inflation, provides valuable insights into the impact of inflation on the economy.
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The benchmark interest rate in the United Kingdom was last recorded at 4 percent. This dataset provides - United Kingdom Interest Rate - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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Home Loans in the United Kingdom decreased to 4273 GBP Million in October from 5223 GBP Million in September of 2025. This dataset provides - United Kingdom Mortgage Lending- actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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TwitterIn September 2025, global inflation rates and central bank interest rates showed significant variation across major economies. Most economies initiated interest rate cuts from mid-2024 due to declining inflationary pressures. The U.S., UK, and EU central banks followed a consistent pattern of regular rate reductions throughout late 2024. In September 2025, Russia maintained the highest interest rate at 17 percent, while Japan retained the lowest at 0.5 percent. Varied inflation rates across major economies The inflation landscape varies considerably among major economies. China had the lowest inflation rate at -0.3 percent in September 2025. In contrast, Russia maintained a high inflation rate of 8 percent. These figures align with broader trends observed in early 2025, where China had the lowest inflation rate among major developed and emerging economies, while Russia's rate remained the highest. Central bank responses and economic indicators Central banks globally implemented aggressive rate hikes throughout 2022-23 to combat inflation. The European Central Bank exemplified this trend, raising rates from 0 percent in January 2022 to 4.5 percent by September 2023. A coordinated shift among major central banks began in mid-2024, with the ECB, Bank of England, and Federal Reserve initiating rate cuts, with forecasts suggesting further cuts through 2025 and 2026.
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TwitterIn line with the G20 Operational Guidelines for Sustainable Financing, the UK publishes quarterly updates on any new issued and effective sovereign direct lending, sovereign called guarantees or Paris Club restructuring agreements. Further information about the G20 Operational Guidelines for Sustainable Financing and the UK’s adherence to it can be found on our Collection Page.
This page contains details of loans made by the UK to other national governments in 2022 to 2023.
In the case of UKEF’s direct lending facility this is the entity who is the borrower of the loan.
The period during which no repayments of principal (or principal and interest) are due from borrowers to lenders. In relation to the work of the IMF/World Bank, this is usually associated with concessional financing only. This is not relevant for UKEF’s direct lending, but we have included information about the pre-credit period, which is held in UKEF systems.
The repayment period of the loan in months.
The amount and currency of the loan, in millions.
For ease of comparison the currency amount has been converted into pounds sterling using the prevailing exchange rate at the last date of the relevant period of each report.
An interest rate may be floating, meaning it is reset at each repayment date, or it is fixed and the same rate applies for the duration of the loan maturity. CIRRs (Commercial Interest Reference Rates) are minimum interest rates that apply to official financing support for export credits and set under the terms of the https://one.oecd.org/document/TAD/PG(2023)7/en/pdf">Arrangement for Officially Supported Export Credits.
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TwitterThese statistical releases present Official Statistics on the government’s mortgage guarantee scheme. They present statistics on the number of mortgage completions, types and values of properties, borrower incomes and breakdowns by geographical area. The data is provided by National Savings and Investments (NS&I) who administer the scheme on behalf of the Treasury.
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TwitterThe UK House Price Index is a National Statistic.
Download the full UK House Price Index data below, or use our tool to https://landregistry.data.gov.uk/app/ukhpi?utm_medium=GOV.UK&utm_source=datadownload&utm_campaign=tool&utm_term=9.30_16_10_24" class="govuk-link">create your own bespoke reports.
Datasets are available as CSV files. Find out about republishing and making use of the data.
This file includes a derived back series for the new UK HPI. Under the UK HPI, data is available from 1995 for England and Wales, 2004 for Scotland and 2005 for Northern Ireland. A longer back series has been derived by using the historic path of the Office for National Statistics HPI to construct a series back to 1968.
Download the full UK HPI background file:
If you are interested in a specific attribute, we have separated them into these CSV files:
https://publicdata.landregistry.gov.uk/market-trend-data/house-price-index-data/Average-prices-2024-08.csv?utm_medium=GOV.UK&utm_source=datadownload&utm_campaign=average_price&utm_term=9.30_16_10_24" class="govuk-link">Average price (CSV, 9.4MB)
https://publicdata.landregistry.gov.uk/market-trend-data/house-price-index-data/Average-prices-Property-Type-2024-08.csv?utm_medium=GOV.UK&utm_source=datadownload&utm_campaign=average_price_property_price&utm_term=9.30_16_10_24" class="govuk-link">Average price by property type (CSV, 28MB)
https://publicdata.landregistry.gov.uk/market-trend-data/house-price-index-data/Sales-2024-08.csv?utm_medium=GOV.UK&utm_source=datadownload&utm_campaign=sales&utm_term=9.30_16_10_24" class="govuk-link">Sales (CSV, 5MB)
https://publicdata.landregistry.gov.uk/market-trend-data/house-price-index-data/Cash-mortgage-sales-2024-08.csv?utm_medium=GOV.UK&utm_source=datadownload&utm_campaign=cash_mortgage-sales&utm_term=9.30_16_10_24" class="govuk-link">Cash mortgage sales (CSV, 7MB)
https://publicdata.landregistry.gov.uk/market-trend-data/house-price-index-data/First-Time-Buyer-Former-Owner-Occupied-2024-08.csv?utm_medium=GOV.UK&utm_source=datadownload&utm_campaign=FTNFOO&utm_term=9.30_16_10_24" class="govuk-link">First time buyer and former owner occupier (CSV, 6.5MB)
https://publicdata.landregistry.gov.uk/market-trend-data/house-price-index-data/New-and-Old-2024-08.csv?utm_medium=GOV.UK&utm_source=datadownload&utm_campaign=new_build&utm_term=9.30_16_10_24" class="govuk-link">New build and existing resold property (CSV, 17.1MB)
https://publicdata.landregistry.gov.uk/market-trend-data/house-price-index-data/Indices-2024-08.csv?utm_medium=GOV.UK&utm_source=datadownload&utm_campaign=index&utm_term=9.30_16_10_24" class="govuk-link">Index (CSV, 6.2MB)
https://publicdata.landregistry.gov.uk/market-trend-data/house-price-index-data/Indices-seasonally-adjusted-2024-08.csv?utm_medium=GOV.UK&utm_source=datadownload&utm_campaign=index_season_adjusted&utm_term=9.30_16_10_24" class="govuk-link">Index seasonally adjusted (CSV, 213KB)
https://publicdata.landregistry.gov.uk/market-trend-data/house-price-index-data/Average-price-seasonally-adjusted-2024-08.csv?utm_medium=GOV.UK&utm_source=datadownload&utm_campaign=average-price_season_adjusted&utm_term=9.30_16_10_24" class="govuk-link">Average price seasonally adjusted (CSV, 222KB)
<a rel="external" href="https://publicdata.landregistry.gov.uk/market-trend-data/house-price-index-data/Repossession-2024-08.csv?utm_medium=GOV.UK&utm_source=datadownload&utm_campaign=repossession&utm_term=9.30_16_10_24" cla
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TwitterThis bulletin provides statistics for cases received (i.e. writs and originating summonses issued), cases disposed and final orders made in respect of mortgages in the Chancery Division of the Northern Ireland High Court for the period July to September 2022 and commentary on trends observed for this quarter in each year from 2007.
This publication is available at the following link: https://www.justice-ni.gov.uk/publications/nicts-mortgages-action-possession">NICTS Mortgages: Action for possession.
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TwitterAll releases listed are published at 9.30am with the exception of Public Sector Finances releases which are published at 7.00am
| 6 January 2025 | UK Official Holdings of Reserves – December 2024 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 16 January 2025 | Bank Referral Scheme – January 2025 | Official Statistics |
| 22 January 2025 | Public Sector Finances – December 2024 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 5 February 2025 | UK Official Holdings of Reserves – January 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 21 February 2025 | Public Sector Finances – January 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 26 February 2025 | Mortgage guarantee scheme – Quarter 3 2024 | Official Statistics |
| 28 February 2025 | Public Spending Statistics – February update including as hoc release of R&D information | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 5 March 2025 | UK Official Holdings of Reserves – February 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 21 March 2025 | Public Sector Finances – February 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 21 March 2025 | OSCAR Quarterly Transparency Release – Quarter 3 2024/25 | Official Statistics |
| 3 April 2025 | UK Official Holdings of Reserves – March 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 23 April 2025 | Public Sector Finances – March 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 6 May 2025 | UK Official Holdings of Reserves – April 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 22 May 2025 | Public Sector Finances – April 2025 | Official Statistics |
| 29 May 2025 | Mortgage guarantee scheme – Quarter 4 2024 | Official Statistics |
| 30 May 2025 | Public Spending Statistics 2023/24 – May update | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 4 June 2025 | UK Official Holdings of Reserves – May 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 20 June 2025 | Public Sector Finances – May 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 20 June 2025 | OSCAR Quarterly Transparency Release – Quarter 4 2024/25 | Official Statistics |
| 3 July 2025 | UK Official Holdings of Reserves – June 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 17 July 2025 | Public Spending Statistics – 2024/25 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 22 July 2025 | Public Sector Finances – June 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 5 August 2025 | UK Official Holdings of Reserves – July 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 21 August 2025 | Public Sector Finances – July 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 27 August 2025 | Mortgage guarantee scheme – Quarter 1 2025 | Official Statistics |
| 3 September 2025 | UK Official Holdings of Reserves – August 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 19 September 2025 | Public Sector Finances – August 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| September 2025 (date TBC) | OSCAR Quarterly Transparency Release – Quarter 1 2024/25 | Official Statistics |
| October 2025 (date TBC) | Block Grant Transparency: October 2025 | |
| 3 October 2025 | UK Official Holdings of Reserves – September 2025 | Accredited Official Statistics |
| 21 October 2025 | Public Sector Finances – Septemb |
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Bank Lending Rate in the United Kingdom increased to 8.62 percent in September from 8.59 percent in August of 2025. This dataset provides - United Kingdom Prime Lending Rate - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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TwitterMortgage rates surged at an unprecedented pace in 2022, with the average 10-year fixed rate doubling between March and December of that year. In response to mounting inflation, the Bank of England implemented a series of rate hikes, pushing borrowing costs steadily higher. By October 2025, the average 10-year fixed mortgage rate stood at **** percent. As financing becomes more expensive, housing demand has cooled, weighing on market sentiment and slowing house price growth. How have the mortgage hikes affected the market? After surging in 2021, the number of residential properties sold fell significantly in 2023, dipping to just above *** million transactions. This contraction in activity also dampened mortgage lending. Between the first quarter of 2023 and the first quarter of 2024, the value of new mortgage loans declined year-on-year for five consecutive quarters. Even as rates eased modestly in 2024 and housing activity picked up slightly, volumes remained well below the highs recorded in 2021. How are higher mortgages impacting homebuyers? For homeowners, the impact is being felt most acutely as fixed-rate deals expire. Mortgage terms in the UK typically range from two to ten years, and many borrowers who locked in historically low rates are now facing significantly higher repayments when refinancing. By the end of 2026, an estimated five million homeowners will see their mortgage deals expire. Roughly two million of these loans are projected to experience a monthly payment increase of up to *** British pounds by 2026, putting additional pressure on household budgets and constraining affordability across the market.