What Falling Inflation Means for Mortgage Rates

📉 Budget 2025: What Falling Inflation Means for Mortgage Rates

Quick Summary

  • Inflation continues to fall following the 2025 Budget — a key factor behind cheaper mortgage rates.
  • Lower inflation reduces the cost of fixed-rate funding for lenders.
  • Tracker mortgages benefit indirectly through improved confidence and potential base-rate cuts.
  • Borrowing power improves: lower inflation = lower household costs = better affordability scores.
  • Expect gradual rate drops through 2025, not dramatic overnight changes.

1 | Why Inflation Matters So Much for Mortgage Rates

Mortgage rates are driven by what lenders think inflation will be in the future.
Why? Because inflation influences:

  • Bank of England decisions
  • Gilt yields
  • Swap rates (used to price fixed-rate mortgages)
  • Lender risk appetite

So when inflation falls, the cost of offering mortgages falls with it.

Budget 2025 reinforced the direction of travel:

👉 inflation down

👉 markets calmer

👉 mortgage rates softening


2 | How the Budget Helps Push Inflation Down

Budget 2025 includes several policies aimed at controlling inflation without shocking the economy:

✔ Controlled public spending

Helps keep inflationary pressure down.

✔ Targeted cost-of-living support

Lower living costs mean fewer inflation spikes.

✔ Energy-bill and transport support

Cheaper essentials = less price pressure = steadier inflation.

✔ Stability for markets

No major tax surprises → calmer gilt yields → cheaper fixed-rate funding.

This creates a smoother path for lenders to drop rates.


3 | What Falling Inflation Means for Fixed Mortgage Rates

Fixed-rate mortgages are priced using swap rates, which fall when inflation expectations fall.

With inflation easing, expect:

  • 📉 Cheaper 5-year fixes
  • 📉 Gradual improvement in 2-year fixes
  • 📉 Better pricing at 60% and 75% LTV
  • 📉 More competitive offerings from challenger lenders

Bottom line:

Fixed deals are likely to keep edging down over the next 3–6 months.


4 | What It Means for Tracker Mortgages

Tracker deals follow the Bank of England base rate — not inflation directly.

But falling inflation makes future rate cuts more likely.

Meaning:

  • Lower inflation increases the chances of another base-rate cut
  • Which means tracker mortgages would fall again
  • Making them increasingly attractive to borrowers comfortable with fluctuations

If inflation behaves, many analysts expect one or two further rate cuts this year.


5 | What Falling Inflation Means for Mortgage Affordability

When inflation is high, lenders assume you’re spending more on:

  • Food
  • Energy
  • Transport
  • Essentials

These assumptions feed directly into affordability calculators.

So when inflation drops:

  • Lenders assume lower household spending
  • Stress-test rates ease
  • Disposable income increases
  • Borrowing power rises

For many first-time buyers, this can mean thousands more in maximum borrowing — without earning a penny more.


6 | What It Means for House Prices

With inflation falling and more rate cuts expected:

👍 Demand gradually increases

Cheaper mortgages draw more buyers back into the market.

👍 House prices stabilise

We’re seeing early signs of gentle price recovery.

👍 New homes supply (170,000 promised) helps balance the market

This prevents runaway price jumps.

Overall:

A steady, healthier market — good for buyers and sellers.


7 | Should You Fix Now or Wait for Lower Rates?

Fix now if:

  • Your deal ends within 6 months
  • You want payment certainty
  • You’re risk-averse

Wait (a little) if:

  • You’re watching for a bigger rate dip
  • You’re upgrading deposit size
  • You’re in no rush to complete

Most buyers today are choosing the hybrid strategy:

👉 Lock a rate now, switch later if rates fall.

Most lenders allow it quietly through brokers.


📞 Want to See How Falling Inflation Affects Your Rate?

We don’t provide advice directly — but we can introduce you to a specialist mortgage adviser who can:

  • Compare today’s fixed and tracker options
  • Forecast likely rate movements for your situation
  • Recalculate your borrowing power using updated affordability models
  • Secure a rate now and monitor for future reductions
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