Mortgages & Property

Remortgage Guide UK 2025/26: When and How to Switch Your Mortgage

Complete guide to remortgaging in the UK. Learn when to remortgage, how to compare deals, calculate savings, and navigate the process from application to completion.

Mortgage information is general guidance only. Mortgages are regulated by the FCA. YOUR HOME MAY BE REPOSSESSED IF YOU DO NOT KEEP UP REPAYMENTS ON YOUR MORTGAGE. Consult an FCA-regulated mortgage adviser before making decisions.

Remortgaging could save you hundreds of pounds each month and thousands over your mortgage term. This guide explains when it makes sense to switch, how to find the best deal, and what to expect from the process.

Why Remortgage?

Top Reasons to Remortgage

Reason Potential Benefit
Fixed rate ending Avoid SVR increase of 2-3%+
Better rates available Lower payments or pay off faster
House value increased Better LTV = better rates
Release equity Access cash for improvements/other
Change terms Shorter/longer term, different type
Consolidate debt Add debts to mortgage (use cautiously)

When Remortgaging Makes Sense

Situation Likely Worth It
Fixed rate ending in 6 months ✓ Yes, start looking now
On SVR ✓ Yes, likely paying too much
Property value up significantly ✓ Yes, better LTV bracket
Need to borrow more ✓ Yes, if rates good
Current rate already competitive Maybe — compare carefully
High early repayment charges Calculate savings vs costs
Circumstances changed significantly May be harder to qualify

How Much Could You Save?

SVR vs Fixed Rate Comparison

Mortgage SVR (8%) Fixed (4.5%) Monthly Saving Annual Saving
£150,000 £1,101 £834 £267 £3,204
£200,000 £1,468 £1,112 £356 £4,272
£250,000 £1,835 £1,390 £445 £5,340
£300,000 £2,202 £1,668 £534 £6,408
£400,000 £2,935 £2,224 £711 £8,532

25-year term, repayment mortgage. Rates illustrative.

Impact of Improved LTV

Property Value Mortgage LTV Typical Rate Monthly (£250k mortgage)
£277,778 £250,000 90% 5.3% £1,507
£312,500 £250,000 80% 4.5% £1,390
£333,333 £250,000 75% 4.2% £1,344
£357,143 £250,000 70% 4.0% £1,319
£416,667 £250,000 60% 3.8% £1,294

If your property has risen in value, you may access better rate brackets.

Types of Remortgage

Like-for-Like Remortgage

Move to a new deal for the same mortgage amount.

Aspect Details
Purpose Better rate, avoid SVR
Amount borrowed Same as current
Equity released No
Affordability check Standard (may be light for product transfer)
Best for Rate savings

Remortgage to Borrow More

Increase your mortgage to release equity.

Aspect Details
Purpose Home improvements, other spending
Amount borrowed Current mortgage + additional
Equity released Yes
Affordability check Full assessment on total borrowing
Best for Funding large expenses

Remortgage to Consolidate Debt

Add other debts to mortgage (use with caution).

Aspect Details
Purpose Lower monthly payments
Amount borrowed Current mortgage + debts
Risk Turns short-term debt into long-term
Interest Lower rate but paid over 25+ years
Best for Rarely recommended — seek advice

Product Transfer vs Remortgage

Key Differences

Factor Product Transfer Remortgage (New Lender)
Lender Same Different
Application Simple, often online Full application
Affordability check Often minimal Full assessment
Legal work None Required (often free)
Valuation Usually none Required (often free)
Processing time Days to weeks 4-8 weeks
Rate options Current lender only Whole market
Borrowing more Often limited More flexibility

When Product Transfer Wins

Scenario Why
Circumstances changed Lighter affordability checks
Need speed Can complete in days
Competitive rate offered Why switch if rate is good?
Low savings from switching Not worth the hassle
Self-employed recently May have difficulty with full affordability

When Remortgaging Wins

Scenario Why
Much better rates elsewhere Significant savings
Want to borrow more Other lenders may be more flexible
Unhappy with lender Service issues
Better LTV bracket Unlock better deals
Product transfer rate poor Don’t accept it — shop around

Current Remortgage Rates (2025)

Fixed Rates by LTV

LTV 2-Year Fixed 5-Year Fixed
90% 4.8-5.5% 4.6-5.2%
85% 4.4-5.0% 4.2-4.8%
80% 4.0-4.6% 3.9-4.4%
75% 3.8-4.3% 3.7-4.2%
60% 3.6-4.0% 3.5-3.9%

Rates change frequently — check current deals.

Comparing Deals: Rate vs Fees

Deal Rate Fees Total Cost (£200k, 2yr)
Deal A 3.99% £999 fee £16,000 interest + £999 = £16,999
Deal B 4.19% No fee £16,800 interest = £16,800
Deal C 4.09% £495 fee £16,400 interest + £495 = £16,895

Best total cost: Deal C

Always calculate the total cost over the deal period, not just the headline rate.

The Remortgage Process

Timeline

Timeframe Action
6 months before Start researching deals
4-5 months before Get Decision in Principle
3-4 months before Apply for chosen deal
2-3 months before Valuation and legal work
1 month before Receive mortgage offer
2 weeks before Final checks
Deal end date New mortgage completes

Step-by-Step Process

1. Gather Information

Document Why Needed
Current mortgage statement Outstanding balance, rate, end date
Property value estimate For LTV calculation
Recent payslips (3 months) Proof of income
Bank statements (3 months) Affordability assessment
ID documents KYC requirements
Proof of address KYC requirements

2. Compare Deals

Use comparison sites and/or a broker:

  • MoneySupermarket
  • Compare the Market
  • uSwitch
  • Moneyfacts
  • Whole-of-market broker

3. Get Decision in Principle (DIP)

Soft or hard credit check confirms likely approval.

4. Apply

Submit full application with documents.

5. Valuation

Lender values your property (often free for remortgages).

6. Legal Work

Solicitor handles transfer (often free with remortgage deals).

7. Mortgage Offer

Written confirmation of new mortgage terms.

8. Completion

New mortgage pays off old one, switch complete.

Remortgage Costs

Typical Fees

Fee Range Notes
Arrangement fee £0-£2,000 Can often add to loan
Booking fee £0-£250 Usually non-refundable
Valuation £0-£500 Often free for remortgages
Legal fees £0-£500 Often free via cashback
Early repayment charge 1-5% of balance On current mortgage
Exit/deeds fee £50-£300 Current lender charge

Free Remortgage Deals

Many lenders offer packages with no valuation or legal fees:

Feature Standard Free Remortgage
Valuation £150-£500 Free
Legal work £300-£500 Free or cashback
Arrangement fee £0-£2,000 May still apply
Total fees £500-£3,000 £0-£2,000

Early Repayment Charges

Typical ERC Structures

Year Typical ERC 5-Year Fixed 2-Year Fixed
Year 1 5% Applies Applies
Year 2 4% Applies Ends
Year 3 3% Applies N/A
Year 4 2% Applies N/A
Year 5 1% Applies N/A
After 0% Ends N/A

When to Pay an ERC

Calculate whether savings outweigh the charge:

Example: Breaking a 5-year fix in year 3

Factor Amount
Outstanding mortgage £200,000
ERC (3%) £6,000
Current rate 5.5%
New rate 4.0%
Monthly saving £168
Annual saving £2,016
Time to break even 3 years
Remaining on deal 2 years

In this case, wait unless rates are expected to rise further.

Remortgage with Changed Circumstances

Self-Employed

Challenge Solution
Variable income 2-3 years accounts may be needed
New business May need 12-24 months trading
Contractor Some lenders more flexible
Lower income shown Product transfer may be easier

Reduced Income

Situation Options
Lower salary Product transfer (lighter checks)
Recent redundancy Wait until new employment stable
Part-time Some lenders count full income
Pension income Specialist lenders for retirement

Credit Issues Since Original Mortgage

Issue Impact
Missed payments May limit options, higher rates
New CCJ Specialist lenders only
High credit card use Affects affordability
New loans Reduces borrowing capacity

Equity Release When Remortgaging

What You Can Borrow

Property Value Current Mortgage Equity Max Additional (75% LTV)
£300,000 £150,000 £150,000 £75,000
£350,000 £200,000 £150,000 £62,500
£400,000 £200,000 £200,000 £100,000
£500,000 £250,000 £250,000 £125,000

Common Uses for Released Equity

Purpose Considerations
Home improvements May add value
Debt consolidation Risky — converts short to long-term
Help family (deposit) Gift tax implications
Investment Not recommended with secured debt
Large purchase Consider alternatives first

Remortgage Checklist

Before Applying

  • Note current deal end date
  • Check early repayment charges
  • Get current mortgage balance
  • Estimate property value
  • Calculate LTV
  • Check credit score
  • Gather income evidence

Comparing Deals

  • Check current lender’s product transfer options
  • Compare whole market (broker or comparison site)
  • Calculate total cost including fees
  • Note any cashback or free legals
  • Check ERC on potential new deal
  • Verify features (overpayment, portability)

Application

  • Get Decision in Principle
  • Submit full application with documents
  • Respond promptly to queries
  • Arrange valuation access if needed
  • Complete legal requirements

Completion

  • Review mortgage offer carefully
  • Confirm completion date
  • Update direct debit
  • Note new deal end date

Using a Mortgage Broker

Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Access whole market May charge fee (£0-£500)
Expert advice Quality varies
Handle paperwork Not always necessary
Know lender criteria Some restricted panels
Save time Must still provide documents

When to Use a Broker

Situation Broker Useful?
Complex income (self-employed) Yes
Credit issues Yes
Time-poor Yes
Straightforward case Optional
Product transfer likely right No — apply direct

Summary

Successful remortgaging means:

  1. Start early — 3-6 months before your deal ends
  2. Compare thoroughly — product transfer vs new lender
  3. Calculate total cost — not just headline rate
  4. Consider fees — free valuation/legal deals add value
  5. Check ERC — if breaking current deal early
  6. Act on time — avoid falling onto expensive SVR

Don’t automatically accept your lender’s product transfer — check the whole market first. Even small rate differences save thousands over a mortgage term.

Sources

  1. Money Helper - Remortgaging Guide
  2. Which? - How to Remortgage
  3. UK Finance - Mortgage Statistics
  4. FCA - Mortgages