💷 Could Cutting £300 a Month in Bills Help You Borrow More?
- Mortgage affordability is based on disposable income.
- High monthly commitments reduce borrowing power.
- Utilities, insurance and finance agreements all count.
- Even £200–£300 a month can materially affect affordability.
- Smart cost management can improve lender options.
1 | How Affordability Really Works
Lenders calculate:
Income – Fixed Commitments = Disposable Income
That disposable income determines how much you can borrow.
If your outgoings are high, your borrowing power drops.
2 | The Expenses People Forget
Common affordability reducers:
- Energy bills
- Broadband & mobile contracts
- Car finance
- Personal loans
- BNPL payments
- Credit cards
- Insurance premiums
- Subscription services
Individually small. Collectively significant.
3 | A Simple Example
Let’s say you reduce:
- Energy & utilities by £120
- Insurance by £50
- Subscriptions & contracts by £80
- Finance costs by £70
That’s £320 per month.
Over a lender stress test period, that difference can materially increase borrowing capacity.
4 | It’s Not Just About Borrowing More
Lower monthly commitments also mean:
- Stronger affordability profile
- Better resilience under stress testing
- More lender choice
- Reduced financial pressure
Sometimes the smartest move isn’t chasing a bigger mortgage — it’s strengthening your position.
📞 Want to Strengthen Your Financial Position?
This website provides information only and does not offer advice.
We can introduce you to specialists who can:
- Review your affordability position
- Identify cost-saving opportunities
- Explain realistic mortgage options
- Help you improve lender appeal

