UK homeowners are being warned to be aware and take action where they can
Britain’s homeowners are bracing for a potential bill increase of over £280 monthly if a worst-case inflation scenario unfolds, fresh analysis has cautioned. Research from Moneyfacts indicates a so-called “Trumpflation” spike – tied to global upheaval and escalating tensions with Iran – could push borrowing costs significantly higher, leaving families thousands of pounds out of pocket.
Under the most pessimistic projection modelled alongside Bank of England scenarios, a typical borrower with a £250,000 mortgage over 25 years could witness annual repayments surge by £3,380 – roughly £281 additional each month. There are around 9 million residential mortgages in the UK, with about 18 per cent in the £200,000 to £299,999 bracket – meaning it’s possible more than 1.5 million people may be affected by this change.
The £281 rise would push yearly costs to £20,724, up from £17,346 before recent geopolitical tensions intensified. The alert emerges as experts note mortgage rates typically hover around 1.5 to 1.75 percentage points above the Bank’s base rate – meaning any inflation spike rapidly translates into steeper borrowing costs.
Three scenarios – and a striking contrast for borrowers
Moneyfacts’ analysis outlines three potential outcomes:
A more favourable scenario would see energy prices decline swiftly, with inflation peaking at 3.6% before falling below 3% next year. Mortgage rates could stabilise between 5% and 5.5%, restricting the damage to as little as £150 annually – though still elevated compared to pre-conflict levels. The central scenario, currently viewed as most probable by markets, anticipates inflation remaining elevated at approximately 3.7%. Mortgage rates would sit between 5.5% and 6%, resulting in borrowers paying £1,050 to £1,950 more each year.
However, the worst-case projection presents a considerably more troubling outlook. Should oil prices stay above $120 per barrel, inflation could climb to 6.2% and push base rates up to roughly 5.25%. This would drive typical mortgage rates towards 6.75% – causing the £3,000-plus annual increase.
‘A devastating hit to affordability’
Adam French, head of consumer finance at Moneyfacts, described the gap between best and worst outcomes as “brutal” for households. He cautioned: “The Bank of England’s ‘Trumpflation’ stress scenarios lay bare just how damaging the economic repercussion of the Iran conflict could become.”
He warned that sustained high oil prices could compel central bankers into aggressive rate increases, directly impacting mortgage costs.
Moneyfacts analysis revealed that mortgage rates typically stand 1.5 to 1.75 percentage points above Bank rate. Therefore an increase in Bank rate to 5.25% would place average homeowner borrowing costs above 6.5% in a worst-case scenario.
Mr French said: ‘That would translate into an increase of more than £3,000 a year for many borrowers – a devastating hit to affordability.’
What homeowners can do
Borrowers aren’t without options, however. Experts suggest numerous lenders permit homeowners to secure a new mortgage deal up to six months before their existing fix expires.
This can serve as protection against additional rate increases – while still enabling borrowers to change if deals get better. Some might also think about lengthening their mortgage term to lower monthly payments, though this raises the overall interest paid across the loan’s lifetime.
With uncertainty looming over inflation and international energy markets, analysts caution that remaining proactive could prove vital to household budgets in the coming months.
