Bank rate cut on the cards as lenders act in anticipation 

Bank rate cut on the cards as lenders act in anticipation 


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There’s growing optimism that the Bank of England will cut base rate next week, from 4% to 3.75%.

Lenders have been cutting rates in anticipation and some analysts says there’s 90% chance of a Santa rate cut to 3.75%.

Average two- and five-year fixed mortgage rates are now at their lowest levels since the start of September 2022, before the Liz Truss  ‘mini-Budget’. 

Overall product choice grew to surpass 7,000 options and the average shelf-life of a deal fell to 18 days. There has been a notable drive by lenders to expand choice on low deposit deals during 2025.

These figures come from Moneyfacts which says product choice overall rose month-on-month, to 7,054 options, close to a record-high.

It adds that the drive to support borrowers seeking higher loan-to-value deals has been evident over the past 12 months. Year-on-year deals at 95% LTV rose by 111 and those at 90% LTV rose by 155, no other LTV tier has risen by more than 100 deals year-on-year.

Average mortgage rates on two- and five-year fixed deals fell by 0.08% and 0.10%, to 4.86% and 4.91% respectively, both now at their lowest points since September 2022. 

It is the first time the average five-year fixed rate has dropped below 5% since May 2023.

The Moneyfacts Average Mortgage Rate fell to 4.91% month-on-month from 4.99%. Year-on-year the rate is down by 0.53%, from 5.44% in December 2024.

Mortgage activity led to a fall in the average shelf-life of a mortgage to 18 days. 

The average two-year tracker variable mortgage rate remained unchanged at 4.66% month-on-month but has fallen by 0.80% year-on-year from 5.46%.

The average ‘revert to’ rate or Standard Variable Rate (SVR) remained at 7.27% month-on-month, but down by 0.58% year-on-year from 7.85%. In comparison, the highest recorded was 8.19% during November and December 2023.

Rachel Springall, Finance Expert at Moneyfacts, says: “Mortgage rates continue on the downward trend and November was particularly fruitful for fixed rate cuts. 

“Year-on-year the mortgage market has seen an optimistic shift in the availability of products aimed at borrowers with a small deposit or equity, with almost 300 products added to the roster at 90% and 95% loan-to-value. The volume of deals at these tiers now rests at their highest counts since March 2008. 

“The Government has been very vocal that it wants lenders to do more to support buyers to boost UK growth, so any improvement in high loan-to-value deals should be celebrated as it gives borrowers more choice as competition ramps up.

“The improvement in cost and product availability of mortgages paints a positive picture for borrowers as we edge towards the New Year. This year has not been without a few ups and downs for rate moves and product availability, but all signs are looking encouraging for the mortgage market to thrive moving into 2026.”

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