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UK Mortgage Calculator 2026 | Monthly Repayments, SDLT & Affordability
2026 UK Mortgage Rates & SDLT

UK Mortgage Calculator 2026

Instantly calculate monthly repayments, total interest, stamp duty and affordability. Covers England, Scotland and Wales. Repayment and interest-only. First-time buyers, home movers and additional properties.

4.5×Income Multiple (FCA)
£125kSDLT Nil-Rate Band
95%Max LTV Available
100%Free, No Signup

🏠 UK Mortgage Repayment Calculator

Enter your property and mortgage details for an instant breakdown
🏡 Property Details
£
£
%
📋 Mortgage Details
yrs
%
💼 Affordability Check (Optional)
£
£
Monthly Repayment
£0
—

Loan to Value (LTV)

Payment by Period

Mortgage & Upfront Cost Breakdown

Repayment Schedule (Year by Year)

Based on a constant interest rate throughout the term. In practice, your rate will change at the end of any fixed period.

Capital vs Interest Over Time

📋 Stamp Duty / Property Tax Rates 2025‑26 & 2026

Property tax rates applicable from April 2025 — the temporary higher nil-rate thresholds expired 31 March 2025

England & Northern Ireland — SDLT

Standard (Home Mover)

Purchase PriceRate
Up to £125,0000%
£125,001 – £250,0002%
£250,001 – £925,0005%
£925,001 – £1,500,00010%
Above £1,500,00012%

First-Time Buyer Relief

Purchase PriceRate
Up to £300,0000%
£300,001 – £500,0005%
Above £500,000Standard rates apply

Additional Property (+5% surcharge)

Purchase PriceEffective Rate
Up to £125,0005%
£125,001 – £250,0007%
£250,001 – £925,00010%
£925,001 – £1,500,00015%
Above £1,500,00017%

Scotland — LBTT (Land & Buildings Transaction Tax)

Purchase PriceStandard RateAdditional Dwelling (ADS +6%)
Up to £145,0000%LBTT + 6% of full price
£145,001 – £250,0002%ADS is 6% of the full purchase price (not banded), added on top of standard LBTT. Introduced October 2024.
£250,001 – £325,0005%
£325,001 – £750,00010%
Above £750,00012%

Wales — LTT (Land Transaction Tax)

Purchase PriceStandard RateAdditional Dwelling (HRAD +4%)
Up to £225,0000%4%
£225,001 – £400,0006%10%
£400,001 – £750,0007.5%11.5%
£750,001 – £1,500,00010%14%
Above £1,500,00012%16%

Scotland ADS rate increased to 6% in October 2024. England additional dwelling surcharge increased to 5% from 31 October 2024. Always verify current rates at gov.uk, Revenue Scotland or Gov Wales.

📊 LTV Tiers & What They Mean for Your Rate

Lower LTV = less risk for the lender = better rates for you
LTV BandDeposit RequiredRate ImpactNotes
60% or below40%+Best rates availableLowest risk tier — largest rate discount
61% – 75%25%+Very competitiveStill excellent rates; most products available
76% – 80%20%+GoodSlightly higher rates than 75% tier
81% – 85%15%+ModerateFewer lenders; higher rates
86% – 90%10%+Limited choiceRates noticeably higher; some lenders exit this tier
91% – 95%5%+Highest rates95% LTV available via Mortgage Guarantee Scheme
Above 95%Less than 5%Not availableMainstream lenders require a minimum 5% deposit

📘 How to Use This UK Mortgage Calculator

This free UK Mortgage Calculator gives you an accurate monthly repayment figure, total interest cost, stamp duty liability and affordability check — in seconds. Enter the property price, your deposit, mortgage term and interest rate, then click calculate.

  1. Enter the property price and your deposit. The calculator automatically syncs the deposit amount (£) and percentage (%) — change either one and the other updates live.
  2. Select your buyer type. First-time buyer relief reduces SDLT in England; additional property surcharges apply if you already own a home anywhere in the world.
  3. Set your term and interest rate. A 25-year term is the traditional standard. Your interest rate should match the deal you’ve been offered or are researching — rates change daily, so check with lenders or a broker for current offers.
  4. Choose repayment type. Repayment (capital & interest) pays off the loan over the term. Interest-only keeps payments lower but the loan remains at the end and must be repaid separately.
  5. Enter your income (optional) to see the affordability check — whether the mortgage passes the FCA 4.5× income test and what your maximum borrowing would be.

How Mortgage Repayments Are Calculated

Monthly repayments on a repayment mortgage are calculated using the standard PMT (Payment) formula used by all UK lenders:

Monthly Payment = P × [r(1+r)ⁿ] ÷ [(1+r)ⁿ − 1]
Where: P = loan amount, r = monthly interest rate (annual rate ÷ 12), n = total months (years × 12)

For example, a £270,000 mortgage at 4.5% over 25 years:

  • Monthly rate r = 4.5% ÷ 12 = 0.375%
  • Total months n = 300
  • Monthly payment = £270,000 × [0.00375 × 1.00375³⁰⁰] ÷ [1.00375³⁰⁰ − 1] = £1,501/month
  • Total repaid over 25 years: £450,244
  • Total interest: £180,244 — more than half the original loan

In the early years, the vast majority of your payment is interest. As your balance reduces, more of each payment goes to capital. This is why overpaying early saves disproportionately large amounts of interest.

Repayment vs Interest-Only Mortgages

Repayment mortgages are the standard choice for residential purchases. Each monthly payment reduces your outstanding balance, so you own the property outright at the end of the term. Your equity builds steadily over time.

Interest-only mortgages have lower monthly payments (you only pay the interest charge each month) but the original loan amount remains unchanged at the end of the term. You must have a credible repayment plan — for residential mortgages lenders scrutinise this carefully. Interest-only is more common for buy-to-let, where the property’s future sale or rental income is the repayment vehicle.

⚠️ Interest-only example: A £270,000 interest-only mortgage at 4.5% costs £1,013/month instead of £1,501. But after 25 years, you still owe the full £270,000 and must repay it in one go. Total interest paid: £303,750 — nearly £124,000 more than a repayment mortgage.

Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) Explained — England

From 1 April 2025, the temporary higher nil-rate thresholds that were in place since September 2022 expired and reverted to standard rates. The key change: the nil-rate threshold dropped from £250,000 back to £125,000.

First-time buyer relief was also reduced — the nil-rate band dropped from £425,000 back to £300,000, and the maximum property price for FTB relief dropped from £625,000 to £500,000.

SDLT Examples (England, from April 2025)

  • £200,000 — home mover: 0% on £125k + 2% on £75k = £1,500
  • £350,000 — home mover: 0% + 2% on £125k + 5% on £100k = £7,500
  • £300,000 — first-time buyer: 0% on full price = £0
  • £450,000 — first-time buyer: 0% on £300k + 5% on £150k = £7,500
  • £300,000 — additional property: 5% + 7% + 10% = £20,000

Mortgage Affordability: The 4.5× Income Rule

The FCA Mortgage Conduct of Business (MCOB) rules require lenders to ensure mortgages are affordable. In practice, most mainstream lenders cap borrowing at 4.5× gross annual income (single or joint).

  • £30,000 income → max borrow ~£135,000
  • £50,000 income → max borrow ~£225,000
  • £75,000 income → max borrow ~£337,500
  • £40,000 + £35,000 joint → max borrow ~£337,500

Some lenders — particularly for professionals or higher earners — offer 5× to 5.5× multiples. Since August 2022, the Bank of England no longer mandates a specific stress test, but lenders must still verify affordability using their own methods, typically checking that repayments remain manageable if rates rose by 2–3 percentage points above the reversion rate.

Fixed vs Variable Rate Mortgages

A fixed rate mortgage locks your interest rate for a set period — typically 2 or 5 years. Your monthly payment stays exactly the same regardless of Bank of England base rate changes. At the end of the fixed period, you revert to the lender’s Standard Variable Rate (SVR) — usually much higher — unless you remortgage.

A tracker mortgage follows the BoE base rate plus a set margin (e.g. base rate + 0.75%). Payments move up or down with rate changes. A discount variable rate tracks the lender’s own SVR at a discount. These carry more risk but can be cheaper if rates fall.

Most buyers choose fixed rates for budget certainty, especially when rates are volatile. The choice between 2-year and 5-year fixes depends on your view of where rates are heading and how long you plan to stay in the property.

First-Time Buyer Benefits in 2026

  • SDLT First-Time Buyer Relief (England): 0% on properties up to £300,000; 5% on £300,001–£500,000. No relief above £500,000.
  • Mortgage Guarantee Scheme: Government-backed 95% LTV mortgages — allows you to buy with just a 5% deposit on properties up to £600,000.
  • Shared Ownership: Buy a share (typically 25–75%) and pay rent on the remainder. Staircase up as your finances allow.
  • Lifetime ISA (LISA): Save up to £4,000/year and receive a 25% government bonus (up to £1,000/year) towards a first home purchase under £450,000.
  • First Homes Scheme: Newly built homes offered at a discount (30–50% off market value) to local first-time buyers in England.

Related UK Financial Calculators

  • UK Income Tax Calculator 2026-27 — Take-home pay, NI, pension and the 60% trap
  • UK Student Loan Calculator — Plan 1, 2, 4, 5 and Postgraduate repayments
  • UK Inflation Calculator — Real purchasing power and house price inflation
  • UK Debt Repayment Calculator — Snowball, avalanche and IVA options
  • UK Cost of Living Calculator — Compare costs across UK cities

Frequently Asked Questions

How much can I borrow for a mortgage in the UK?
Most UK lenders cap borrowing at 4.5× gross annual income. At a combined income of £70,000, you could typically borrow up to £315,000. Some lenders offer up to 5–5.5× for professionals or higher earners, subject to affordability checks.
How much stamp duty do I pay in 2026?
In England, from April 2025: 0% up to £125,000, then 2% to £250,000, then 5% to £925,000. First-time buyers pay 0% up to £300,000. Additional properties incur a 5% surcharge on every band. Scotland uses LBTT; Wales uses LTT — both have different rates.
What is LTV and why does it matter?
LTV (Loan to Value) is your mortgage as a percentage of the property price. A 10% deposit gives 90% LTV. Lower LTV means less risk for the lender and unlocks better rates — typically the biggest improvements occur at 75% and 60% LTV thresholds.
What is the difference between repayment and interest-only?
Repayment mortgages reduce your outstanding loan with each payment, so you own the property debt-free at the end. Interest-only mortgages have lower monthly payments but the full loan remains at the end of the term and must be repaid in full. Residential interest-only is rare and requires a credible exit strategy.
How much deposit do I need?
The minimum deposit is 5% (95% LTV), available via the Mortgage Guarantee Scheme. A 10% deposit (90% LTV) opens significantly more products. A 25%+ deposit (75% LTV) unlocks the most competitive rates. Larger deposits also mean smaller loan amounts and lower monthly payments.
Should I choose a fixed or variable rate?
Fixed rates offer certainty — your payment stays the same for the fixed period regardless of rate changes. Variable and tracker rates can be cheaper when rates fall but carry the risk of rising payments. Most borrowers choose fixed rates for budgeting certainty. Consider your circumstances and always take independent mortgage advice.
How long should my mortgage term be?
A longer term reduces monthly payments but greatly increases total interest. A 25-year term on £200,000 at 4.5% costs £1,112/month and £133,500 in total interest. Extending to 35 years costs £950/month but £198,800 in total interest — £65,000 more. Shorter terms build equity faster and save significantly on interest.
What is an affordability assessment?
Lenders assess your income, regular outgoings, existing debts, childcare costs and credit history. They also stress-test to check you could still afford payments if rates rose. All lenders must comply with FCA Mortgage Conduct of Business (MCOB) rules and cannot lend irresponsibly.
Disclaimer: This UK Mortgage Calculator is for illustrative and estimation purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice. Results assume a constant interest rate throughout the mortgage term; in practice, your rate will change at each review or renewal. SDLT/LTT/LBTT calculations are based on rates effective from April 2025 and should be verified before exchange. Mortgage availability, rates and affordability criteria vary by lender and individual circumstances. Always seek advice from a qualified, FCA-regulated mortgage broker or adviser. Last reviewed: April 2026.
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