Is Your Mortgage Rate Coming to an End? Why Waiting and Seeing Could Cost You More
When your fixed-rate mortgage is coming to an end, it can be tempting to sit tight, cross your fingers, and hope rates settle down.
But in today’s market, that “wait and see” approach could quickly turn into “wait and pay”.
With the Bank Rate currently at 3.75%, many homeowners assume the market should feel calm. In reality, mortgage pricing has still been moving because lenders also react to wholesale funding costs and swap rates. Rightmove’s latest tracker says some mortgage rates have increased this month, even though the Bank Rate itself has not changed.
If your deal ends in 2026, this is not next year’s problem. It is this year’s planning job.
Why waiting can be risky
A mortgage deal expiry is a bit like seeing dark clouds overhead and deciding not to bring an umbrella because it is not raining yet. By the time the downpour starts, you are already soaked.
UK Finance expects around 1.8 million fixed-rate mortgages to mature in 2026. At the same time, it forecasts a 10% rise in external remortgaging and continued pressure on affordability as mortgage payments stay high relative to income. In other words, you will not be the only homeowner reviewing options.
That matters because when more borrowers enter the market at once, timing becomes crucial. Moneyfacts says mortgage availability has fallen by 1,283 products, equal to 17% of the market, in just one month. When product choice shrinks, the best options can disappear far faster than many borrowers expect.
Did you know?
As of 8 April 2026, Rightmove reports the average 2-year fixed rate at 5.42% and the average 5-year fixed rate at 5.41%. Even the lowest listed rates were 4.71% for a 2-year fix and 4.77% for a 5-year fix.
Did you know? Moneyfacts says the average 2-year fixed rate jumped from 4.84% to 5.84% in one month, while the average 5-year fixed rate rose from 4.96% to 5.75% over the same period. That is a sharp move in such a short time.
Did you know? Moneyfacts also found that borrowers taking a typical £250,000 loan could now be paying around £150 more per month, or £1,777 more per year, than at the start of the recent market disruption. For some homeowners rolling off older five-year fixes, the increase could be £417 to £444 per month, which is more than £5,000 a year.
That is not a small bump in the road. That is a budget pothole.
Why this matters for families
For most households, the mortgage is the largest monthly commitment. UK Finance says total UK mortgage debt is now over £1.6 trillion. This is why leaving your next deal to chance is not just a rate decision. It is a household cash-flow decision.
A higher monthly payment does not just affect your mortgage. It can reduce what is left for childcare, food, savings, holidays, and the everyday cushion that keeps family finances steady. And because lenders can reprice quickly, delaying a decision can mean the deal you liked on Monday is gone by Friday. Moneyfacts says the current market is one where “timing is critical”, and competitive deals may be short-lived.
The real cost of “I’ll deal with it later”
Many homeowners believe waiting might help them catch a lower rate. Sometimes that happens. But sometimes waiting means:
- fewer products to choose from
- tighter affordability
- higher monthly payments
- more pressure as your deadline gets closer
That is why “wait and see” can become “wait and squeeze”.
Even Rightmove notes that lenders are being cautious and that market volatility is feeding into fixed-rate pricing. So even without a Bank Rate rise, mortgage costs can still move against you.
So, what should homeowners do now?
If your fixed-rate deal expires in 2026, now is the time to review your options, sense-check your budget, and understand what a new rate could mean for your monthly payments.
The goal is not to panic. It is to prepare.
Because when your current deal is coming to an end, the smartest move is rarely to stand still. In a changing market, being proactive gives you more choice, more control, and more time to make the right decision for your family.
The bottom line? Hoping for the best is not a mortgage strategy. Planning ahead is. Talk to our Connect Experts.
Thank you for reading our “Is Your Mortgage Rate Coming to an End? | Act Now, Not Later” publication. Stay “Connect“-ed for more updates soon!


