Mortgages & Property

Should I Fix My Mortgage or Go Variable? — UK Decision Guide

Compare fixed vs variable rate mortgages. When to lock in, when to stay flexible, and how to decide based on your finances, risk tolerance, and current market rates.

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.

Choosing between a fixed and variable mortgage is one of the biggest financial decisions homeowners face. Here’s how to work out which is right for you.

Fixed vs Variable — Quick Comparison

Feature Fixed Rate Standard Variable Rate (SVR) Tracker
Rate changes? No — locked in Lender can change anytime Follows Bank of England base rate
Typical rate 4-5.5% 7-8% Base rate + 0.5-1.5%
Budget certainty High Low Medium
Early repayment charges Yes (during fix) Usually none Sometimes
Flexibility Low High Medium
Best for Certainty seekers Short-term flexibility Rate-fall bets

When to Fix Your Mortgage

Fixing makes sense when:

  • You need payment certainty — monthly budget can’t absorb increases
  • Rates are low relative to history — locking in protects against rises
  • You plan to stay put — not moving within the fix period
  • You’re stretching your budget — any rate increase would cause stress
  • The economy is uncertain — inflation or rate rises seem likely

The Case for a 2-Year Fix

Advantage Detail
Lower rate Typically 0.2-0.5% cheaper than 5-year
Review sooner Can switch if rates drop
Less commitment Good if you might move
Market timing Benefit from any future rate falls sooner

The Case for a 5-Year Fix

Advantage Detail
Longer certainty No rate worries for 5 years
Fewer fees Only one arrangement fee vs two or three
Less hassle No remortgage for 5 years
Peace of mind Protected through economic ups and downs

When to Stay on a Variable Rate

A variable rate might suit you if:

  • You’re about to move — no early repayment charges to worry about
  • You expect rates to fall — and want to benefit immediately
  • You want to overpay significantly — many fixed deals cap overpayments at 10%
  • You’re on a competitive tracker — some old tracker deals are excellent
  • You need flexibility — might sell, port, or make large overpayments

The SVR Trap

Most homeowners should never stay on their lender’s SVR longer than necessary:

Scenario Fixed rate (4.5%) SVR (7.5%) Monthly difference
£200,000 mortgage, 25 years £1,111 £1,478 £367 more
£300,000 mortgage, 25 years £1,667 £2,217 £550 more
£150,000 mortgage, 20 years £949 £1,209 £260 more

Over a full year, that’s £3,120 to £6,600 wasted on an SVR when you could fix.

How to Decide — Step by Step

Step 1 — Check Your Risk Tolerance

Ask yourself: if your monthly payment jumped by £200-300, could you handle it?

  • No → Fix your mortgage
  • Yes, comfortably → Variable could work

Step 2 — Check the Rate Outlook

Indicator Suggests
Bank of England raising rates Fix to protect yourself
Rates expected to fall Variable or short fix
Inflation above target Rates likely to rise — consider fixing
Economic slowdown Rates may fall — short fix or tracker

Step 3 — Check Your Plans

Your situation Best option
Staying 5+ years 5-year fix
Might move in 2-3 years 2-year fix (check portability)
Moving within 12 months Stay on SVR / tracker
Want to make large overpayments Variable or fix with generous overpayment terms

Step 4 — Calculate the Break-Even

Compare total costs over the period, including:

  • Monthly payments
  • Arrangement fees (often £500-£1,500)
  • Valuation and legal fees (sometimes free on remortgage)
  • Early repayment charges if you might leave early

Current Market Context (2026)

Factor Detail
Bank of England base rate 4.5% (as of early 2026)
Average 2-year fix Around 4.5-5%
Average 5-year fix Around 4.3-4.8%
Average SVR 7-8%
Market expectation Gradual rate reductions expected

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Staying on SVR by accident — always set a reminder for when your fix ends
  2. Only looking at the rate — total cost includes fees too
  3. Fixing too long when you’ll move — early repayment charges can cost thousands
  4. Ignoring overpayment limits — 10% per year is standard on fixed deals
  5. Not starting early enough — begin searching 3-6 months before your deal ends

Sources

  1. FCA — Mortgages
  2. MoneyHelper — Buying a home