Offset mortgage (UK): how the calculation works, benefits & watch-outs
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An offset mortgage links your mortgage to an offset savings/current account. The money in that account doesn’t normally
earn savings interest — instead it reduces the balance you pay mortgage interest on.
How this calculator currently applies offset (pay the same, finish sooner)
Our calculator treats the offset balance as reducing the balance used for interest each repayment period.
The key concept is the effective principal:
Effective principal = max(0, remaining balance − offset balance) Interest each period = effective principal × periodic rate
With a standard repayment mortgage, the payment amount stays the same (for the selected frequency). Because the interest is lower,
more of your payment goes to principal — so you may pay off the mortgage earlier.
Where you’ll see the difference
Interest this period (after offset) decreases when you increase the offset balance.
The estimated payoff time (periods/years) can shorten.
The amortization schedule shows effective principal and the new interest/principal split.
Assumption: we currently assume your offset balance is constant over time (no deposits/withdrawals).
Another common offset method: reduce monthly payment but keep the same term
Some borrowers prefer to keep the mortgage term unchanged (e.g. 25 years) and use the offset benefit to reduce the required payment.
Conceptually:
You still calculate interest on the effective principal.
But instead of keeping payment fixed, you recompute the payment so the loan still finishes in the original term.
In other words, you choose between:
Pay the same → finish sooner (what this calculator currently models)
Pay less → finish at the same time (alternative approach)
Benefits (why people like offset)
Lower interest cost (because interest is charged on a smaller effective balance).
Flexibility: keeping cash accessible while still reducing interest (depends on your lender’s offset account rules).
Potential to clear the mortgage faster if you keep payments the same.
Watch-outs (things to consider)
Rate/fees trade-off: offset deals may have higher rates or fees than non-offset options. Compare total cost.
Cash discipline: the money is easy to spend — if the offset balance falls, your interest rises again.
Tax/returns: you’re effectively getting a “risk-free return” equal to your mortgage rate, but you may give up higher returns elsewhere (depends on risk and tax situation).
Eligibility: affordability checks, credit profile and LTV still matter.
Edge cases: if your offset balance exceeds the remaining balance, interest can drop to near zero — but you’ll still have repayments unless you change the product or repay the loan.
Call to action:
Want to see offset impact clearly? Try the calculator with offset = £0 vs £50,000 and compare “Interest this period” and “Estimated payoff time”.