Mortgages & Property
What Is LTV? Mortgage Loan to Value Explained
Understanding LTV ratios. How loan to value affects your mortgage rate, deposit needed, and what LTV you should aim for.
LTV is one of the most important factors in determining your mortgage rate and options.
What LTV Means
Simple Definition
| LTV |
Meaning |
| Loan |
Your mortgage |
| To |
Divided by |
| Value |
Property value |
| Result |
Percentage |
The Calculation
| Formula |
LTV |
| Mortgage ÷ Property Value |
× 100 |
| £180,000 ÷ £200,000 |
× 100 = 90% |
LTV and Deposit Relationship
| LTV |
Deposit |
| 95% |
5% |
| 90% |
10% |
| 85% |
15% |
| 80% |
20% |
| 75% |
25% |
| 60% |
40% |
Why LTV Matters
Risk to Lender
| Higher LTV |
Lender Risk |
| 95% |
High risk |
| 90% |
Elevated risk |
| 80% |
Moderate |
| 60% |
Lower risk |
| Less equity |
Less buffer if prices fall |
Impact on You
| Factor |
Higher LTV |
Lower LTV |
| Interest rates |
Higher |
Lower |
| Product choice |
Fewer options |
More options |
| Approval |
Harder |
Easier |
| Monthly payments |
Higher |
Lower |
LTV Bands
Common LTV Tiers
| LTV Band |
Characteristics |
| 60% and below |
Best rates available |
| 60-75% |
Very good rates |
| 75-80% |
Good rates |
| 80-85% |
Moderate rates |
| 85-90% |
Higher rates |
| 90-95% |
Highest rates |
| 95%+ |
Very limited options |
Example Rate Difference (Illustrative)
| LTV |
Example Rate |
| 60% |
4.20% |
| 75% |
4.45% |
| 80% |
4.60% |
| 85% |
4.85% |
| 90% |
5.20% |
| 95% |
5.75% |
Cost Impact Example
| £200,000 Mortgage |
90% LTV (5.2%) |
75% LTV (4.45%) |
| Monthly payment |
£1,106 |
£1,006 |
| Over 25 years |
£331,800 |
£301,800 |
| Difference |
|
£30,000 less |
Calculating Your LTV
When Buying
| Element |
Amount |
| Property price |
£250,000 |
| Your deposit |
£25,000 (10%) |
| Mortgage needed |
£225,000 (90%) |
| LTV |
90% |
When Remortgaging
| Element |
Amount |
| Current property value |
£300,000 |
| Outstanding mortgage |
£180,000 |
| LTV |
60% |
Property Value Increase Impact
| Over Time |
Impact |
| Original purchase |
£200,000 |
| Current value |
£250,000 |
| Original mortgage |
£180,000 |
| Now paid down to |
£160,000 |
| New LTV |
64% (£160k ÷ £250k) |
LTV for Different Scenarios
First-Time Buyers
| Typical LTV |
Deposit |
| 95% |
5% (minimum common) |
| 90% |
10% (better rates) |
| 85% |
15% (improved options) |
Home Movers
| Situation |
LTV Benefit |
| Equity from sale |
Lower LTV on new property |
| Upsizing |
May need higher LTV |
| Downsizing |
Much lower LTV likely |
Remortgaging
| Opportunity |
Why |
| Property grown in value |
LTV drops |
| Mortgage balance lower |
LTV drops |
| Better rates available |
From lower LTV |
LTV Thresholds
Key Numbers
| Threshold |
Significance |
| 95% |
Maximum for most lenders |
| 90% |
Much better choice than 95% |
| 80% |
Sweet spot threshold |
| 75% |
Even better rates |
| 60% |
Top-tier rates |
Getting Below Thresholds
| If You’re At |
To Get To |
Need Extra |
| 85% LTV |
80% LTV |
5% more deposit |
| On £200k |
|
£10,000 more |
| Rate saving |
~0.25-0.5% |
May be worth it |
Example Value
| Save Extra |
To Improve LTV |
| £10,000 deposit |
85% → 80% |
| Rate improvement |
~0.4% |
| Monthly saving |
~£40 |
| Over 25 years |
~£12,000 |
| Return on £10k |
Excellent |
Reducing Your LTV
At Purchase
| Strategy |
Effect |
| Save larger deposit |
Lower LTV |
| Family help |
Gifted deposit |
| Cheaper property |
Same deposit = lower LTV |
Over Time
| Factor |
Impact |
| Mortgage repayments |
Reduces loan |
| Property value growth |
Increases value |
| Overpayments |
Faster loan reduction |
| All improve LTV |
|
Overpaying Example
| Scenario |
Impact |
| £200k property, 90% LTV |
£180k mortgage |
| After 2 years normal |
£172k balance |
| After 2 years + £100/m |
£168k balance |
| If property grows 3%/yr |
£212k value |
| Normal payments LTV |
81% |
| With overpaying LTV |
79% |
Negative LTV / Negative Equity
What It Means
| Situation |
Calculation |
| Mortgage |
£180,000 |
| Property value |
£160,000 |
| LTV |
112% |
| Negative equity |
Owe more than value |
When This Happens
| Cause |
Situation |
| Price falls |
Property worth less |
| High original LTV |
Little buffer |
| Short ownership |
Not much paid down |
Implications
| Issue |
Impact |
| Can’t sell |
Without paying difference |
| Can’t move easily |
Trapped |
| Remortgage hard |
Options limited |
| Time usually helps |
Prices often recover |
Summary
| LTV Level |
Meaning |
| Lower |
Better rates, more options |
| Higher |
Fewer options, higher rates |
| 60-75% |
Excellent |
| 80-85% |
Good |
| 90%+ |
Expensive |
| Calculate Yours |
Formula |
| Mortgage |
£______ |
| ÷ Property value |
£______ |
| × 100 |
= ___% LTV |
| To Improve LTV |
Action |
| Bigger deposit |
If buying |
| Overpay mortgage |
Reduce balance |
| Wait |
Property growth |
| Remortgage |
When LTV drops |
Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. PocketWise provides information and guidance — we do not offer financial advice. Seek independent mortgage advice before making decisions about borrowing.
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