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Major UK Lenders Announce Mortgage Rate Reductions: What It Means for Home Buyers

Major UK lenders including Halifax Intermediaries and TSB are reducing mortgage rates, potentially saving first-time buyers hundreds of pounds annually. This comes amidst a gradual recovery in the mortgage market.

By David Sampson
17 April 2026
3 min read
Major UK Lenders Announce Mortgage Rate Reductions: What It Means for Home Buyers

Written by David Sampson for Mortgage118. Last updated 17 April 2026. Reviewed against our editorial standards. Editorial standards.

TL;DR

  • Major Lenders to Reduce Mortgage Rates As of 17 April 2026, major lenders including Halifax Intermediaries and TSB have announced plans to reduce their mortgage rates.
  • Real-World Impact for First-Time Buyers Let s consider a first-time buyer taking out a £250,000 repayment mortgage at 75% LTV.
  • If they were to secure a mortgage with TSB, which is reducing its two-year fixed house purchase mortgage rates by up to 0.45 percentage points, the savings can be significant.

Major Lenders to Reduce Mortgage Rates

As of 17 April 2026, major lenders including Halifax Intermediaries and TSB have announced plans to reduce their mortgage rates. Halifax Intermediaries is set to decrease rates by up to 0.35 percentage points on fixed-rate products, while TSB plans to reduce rates on two-year fixed house purchase mortgages by up to 0.45 percentage points. This comes in response to falling swap rates, which significantly influence mortgage prices. Amanda Bryden, head of Halifax Intermediaries and Scottish Widows Bank, stated that while swap rates continue to be volatile, the current decline offers an opportunity to pass savings onto home buyers.

Real-World Impact for First-Time Buyers

Let’s consider a first-time buyer taking out a £250,000 repayment mortgage at 75% LTV. If they were to secure a mortgage with TSB, which is reducing its two-year fixed house purchase mortgage rates by up to 0.45 percentage points, the savings can be significant. Assuming the rate was previously 5.88% (the average two-year fixed homeowner mortgage rate on the market as of Thursday 16 April), a reduction of 0.45 percentage points would bring the rate down to 5.43%. This rate cut reduces monthly payments from £1,506 to £1,454 — a saving of £52 per month or £624 per year.

Market Context and Outlook

These rate reductions come at a time when the average two-year fixed homeowner mortgage rate is 5.88%, down from 5.89% on Wednesday. The average five-year fixed homeowner mortgage rate remains unchanged at 5.77%. At the start of March, these averages were 4.83% and 4.95% respectively. Therefore, while rates have increased overall in recent months, the recent reductions announced by major lenders such as Halifax Intermediaries and TSB are a welcome reprieve for home buyers. Furthermore, with the UK base rate currently at 3.75% and money markets pricing for fewer base rate hikes, this could signal a trend towards lower mortgage rates in the near future. Adam French, head of consumer finance at Moneyfacts, noted that rising mortgage rates seem to have plateaued for now, with several lenders including Santander, Atom Bank, and Skipton Building Society making meaningful cuts in recent days. Nicholas Mendes, mortgage technical manager at John Charcol, also suggested that HSBC’s plans to cut mortgage rates could influence other major lenders to follow suit.

Product Availability

As of 16 April, Moneyfacts reported 6,665 homeowner mortgage products available on the market, an increase of 809 deals since a low of 5,856 products on 24 March. However, this is still 973 (12.7%) fewer than before the conflict in Iran began. Despite this, the recent rate reductions and increasing product numbers suggest a gradual recovery and improvement in the mortgage market, which will ultimately benefit home buyers and homeowners looking to remortgage.

About David Sampson

David Sampson writes about the UK mortgage market for Mortgage118, covering specialist lending, market trends, and practical advice for borrowers. All content is reviewed for accuracy against FCA guidelines and current market data.

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