Mortgage lenders raise rates amid uncertainty over BoE interest rate cuts

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Many of the major lenders raised their mortgage rates this week, amid uncertainty over the pace of future interest rate cuts by the Bank of England.

The average rate for a two-year fixed mortgage stands at 4.89%, while five-year fixed deals average 5.09%, according to data from Uswitch.

Comments by Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey at a cross-party Treasury select committee session on Tuesday over the impact of US president Donald Trump's tariffs on policymaking cast more doubt over the central bank's pace of rate cuts.

Bailey said that while the interest rate "path remains downwards, but how far and how quickly is now shrouded in a lot more uncertainty, frankly.”

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The Bank of England has cut interest rates from 4.5% to 4.25% in early May, meaning the average homeowner on a tracker mortgage will see their monthly repayments fall by nearly £29, after the quarter-point snip to the base rate.

However, the primary inflation measure, the Consumer Price Index (CPI), stood at 3.5% in the 12 months to April, a higher-than-expected increase from the previous month. That means price increases are moving away from the BoE's 2% target.

This week, no major lender cut rates, with the majority hiking mortgages for first-time buyers as the market moves away from the mini price war that pushed deals deep into under-4% territory.

HSBC mortgage deals

HSBC (HSBA.L) has a 4.01% rate for a five-year deal, which is up from the previous week. For those with a Premier Standard account with the lender, this rate is 3.98%.

Looking at the two-year options, the lowest rate is 3.96% on a Premier Standard account with a £999 fee, slightly higher from the previous week.

Both cases assume a 60% loan-to-value (LTV) mortgage, meaning buyers need to have at least 40% for a deposit.

HSBC offers 95% LTV deals, meaning you only need to save for a 5% deposit. However, the rates are much higher, with a two-year fix at 5.05% or 4.89% for a five-year fix.

This is because their financial situation and deposit size determine the rate someone can get. The larger the deposit, the lower the LTV, allowing buyers to access better deals because lenders consider them less risky.

NatWest mortgage deals

NatWest's (NWG.L) five-year deal is 3.99% with a £1,495 fee, which is unchanged from last week.

The cheapest two-year fix deal is 3.94%, which is also unchanged from last week. You'll need at least a 40% deposit to qualify for the rates in both cases.

Santander mortgage deals

At Santander (BNC.L), a five-year fix is 4.08% for first-time buyers, higher than the previous 3.93%. It has a £999 fee, assuming a 40% deposit.