Martin Lewis advises how to SLASH the cost of your mortgage and save hundreds of pounds

Are you overpaying £1,000s on your mortgage? Brexit uncertainty may loom large, but mortgage rates are still pretty near all-time lows, so it’s an opportune time to check if you can undercut your current deal. This is especially important if you’re one of the two million people sitting on a lender’s standard variable rate (SVR). Take Karen who emailed to say: “I moved from an SVR to a fix. By keeping monthly payments the same, I knocked 9yrs off the term, saving £54,000. Thanks.”

Step 1: Find the facts about your current mortgage

Dig out the details of your existing deal, and see if it’s worth remortgaging (ie, switching to save). You’ll need to know…

  1. What’s the rate? Plus monthly payments and outstanding debt

  2. What type is it? Fix, tracker, discount, SVR

  3. When is the intro deal over? Eg, when does the 2-year fix end exactly?

  4. How long is the full mortgage term? When must it be fully repaid? Eg, in 10, 15, 25 years

  5. Will I be penalised? Are there any early repayment/exit penalties?

Work out your current loan to value (LTV) – the proportion of your property’s CURRENT value you’re borrowing. Eg, £90,000 on a £100,000 property is 90 percent LTV.

For each five percent your LTV drops, usually until 60 percent, the cheaper the deal. So if your home’s increased in value since you got your mortgage, you may gain. Full help on this in my free remortgage guide www.moneysavingexpert.com/remortgage

Step 2: Benchmark the cheapest rates

Start with a comparison site that includes all deals, including ‘direct only’, those that aren’t offered by broker. You can use my comparison at www.moneysavingexpert.com/mortgagebestbuys and sites such as www.moneyfacts.co.uk.

Step 3: Calculate how much cheaper a new deal is

A good way to compare mortgages is to divide the fee across the discount or fixed period. So a £1,200 fee on a two-year (ie, 24-month) deal is £50 a month – then add that to the monthly repayment (my best buys tool above does this for you). 

For smaller mortgages it’s worth checking if your existing mortgage provider has a cheaper deal; as it may have no fees for shifting to it. There’s a calculator to compare two mortgages at www.moneysavingexpert.com/mortgaegcalc

Step 4: Think about whether you’ll be accepted

This can be tricky – there are two factors…

– Are you creditworthy? Your credit history is a huge part of whether you’ll be accepted for any type of credit, including a mortgage. 

– Will you pass affordability checks? Lenders won’t just check if you can afford the monthly repayments at the current rate, but they’ll also stress test affordability if rates were six percent or seven percent.So it’s really important you reel in your spending months before applying, as lenders will want evidence of income, big bills, expenses and even eating out.

Step 5: Consider using a mortgage broker 

Brokers can match you to the right deal, as they have access to info that consumers don’t, such as credit-scoring and affordability criteria.

They also have access to different deals than are offered directly to borrowers. For face-to-face help ask friends for local broker recommendation or use Unbiased.co.uk or VouchedFor.co.uk to find one. There are fee-free brokers, who just take a commission from the lender, available on the phone such as www.landc.co.uk.

Won’t Brexit impact interest rates – shouldn’t I wait? 

Forget predictions about what will happen – no one knows. What we do know is new mortgage rates are still cheap, and there’s more room for them to rise than drop.

So if certainty is what matters to you, get a cheap fix now, and the more you want certainty, the longer you should consider fixing. Generally you pay a little more to fix, but not much. I’m not saying that with hindsight it’ll be the cheapest route, just that you’re far less subject to huge economic winds as well as price and budgeting certainty.

Martin Lewis is the Founder and Chair of MoneySavingExpert.com. To join the 13 million people who get his free Money Tips weekly email, go to www.moneysavingexpert.com/latesttip

source: express.co.uk