A small toy house is discarded in a rubbish bin

Mortgage lifespan falls to record low as lenders pull products due to interest rate uncertainty

The average shelf life of a mortgage fell to a record low of just eight days in March, down from 14 days in February, according to the latest Moneyfacts UK Mortgage Trends Treasury Report. The previous lowest average lifespan of a mortgage was in July 2023, at just 12 days.

Overall product choice has decreased month-on-month and was down by 1,283 options in March, falling below 7,000 options for the first time since November 2025. The current pool of 6,201 options is at its lowest count in two years as lenders pull products from sale due to uncertainty over the future path of interest rates.

The average shelf life of a mortgage is now lower than it was at the start of October 2022 (15 days), when the ‘mini budget’ had an unprecedented impact on mortgage choice.

“The lifespan of a mortgage deal has plummeted to a record low of just eight days on average and mortgage product availability has shrunk by around 17% in just one month,” said Rachel Springall, finance expert at Moneyfacts. “Fixed mortgage rates noted sizeable marginal increases month-on-month, such as with the average two-year fixed rate rising by 1% for the first time in nearly four years, way back in November 2022.

“The unrest in the Middle East caused mortgage mayhem, with lenders rushing to pull products from sale and reprice at higher rates throughout March. Unfortunately, this has led to a drop of almost 400 options for borrowers with just a 5% or 10% deposit or equity, awful news for first-time buyers. The market overall has experienced the worst upheaval to mortgage choice since the mini budget, yet another blow for borrowers over the past five years, which includes the surge in interest rates during the summer of 2023 amid higher inflation expectations.

“Concerns surrounding the possibility of inflation getting out of control this year has completely flipped the projected path of interest rates. The start of 2026 appeared promising, especially for borrowers about to remortgage, but it’s all changed. The tide could turn once the markets feel more confident about future rate pricing, but borrowers who are due to come off a deal soon will be incredibly frustrated by mortgage rate hikes.

“If someone took out a typical mortgage now, compared to the start of March, it would cost them around £1,800 a year more in repayments on a two-year fixed deal. Worse still, borrowing the same size loan on a typical mortgage now, compared to 2021 on a five-year fixed deal, would cost around £5,000 more in mortgage repayments over one year.”

 

Moneyfacts graph

Source: Moneyfacts

The Moneyfacts UK Mortgage Trends Treasury Report captures data on the first of each month; since the beginning of March, the average two-year fixed rate increased by 1%, the biggest monthly rise since November 2022 (up by 1.04%), and the average five-year rose by 0.79%, the biggest monthly rise since July 2023 (up by 0.80%).

 

Moneyfacts Average Mortgage Rate
Apr-24 Apr-25 Oct-25 Mar-26 Apr-26
Moneyfacts Average

Mortgage Rate

5.65% 5.28% 5.01% 4.90% 5.72%
Calculated from the total of all on-sale, core market, fixed and variable tracker mortgages. Standard exclusions apply: Self-build only, shared ownership only, new build only, shared equity only, standard variable rates and adverse credit
Source: Moneyfacts Average Mortgage Rate.

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