In the UK, many borrowers choose between a fixed-rate mortgage (often for 2 or 5 years) and a
tracker mortgage (which typically moves with the Bank of England Base Rate, plus a margin).
There isn’t one “best” choice—only what fits your priorities: certainty, flexibility, or lowest expected cost.
Fixed-rate mortgages
Your interest rate is fixed for an initial period (e.g., 2/3/5/10 years). Your monthly payment is usually stable
during that period.
Why fixes are popular:
Predictable payments (better for budgeting)
Protection if rates rise
Peace of mind for families and first-time buyers
What to watch:
Early Repayment Charges (ERCs): leaving the deal early can be expensive.
Porting: if you move home, you may be able to port the mortgage, subject to lender approval.
Overpayment limits: many fixed deals allow ~10% overpayments per year without ERCs (varies by lender).
Tracker mortgages
A tracker typically follows the Bank of England Base Rate plus a set margin (e.g., “Base Rate + 0.75%”).
If base rate rises, payments usually rise; if it falls, payments can fall.
Pros:
Can be cheaper if rates fall
Often more flexible than fixed rates (not always)
Transparent link to base rate
Cons:
Payments can rise quickly and unpredictably
Harder to plan long-term budgets
A simple decision framework
If you need payment certainty: a fixed rate is often safer.
If flexibility matters most: a tracker (or low/no-ERC product) may suit you.
If you may move soon: check ERCs and whether the product is portable.
If you plan to overpay: check overpayment allowances and ERC structure.
Call to action:
Tell me your priority (stability vs flexibility vs lowest payment) and your likely time horizon, and I’ll suggest what features to compare.