Scottish Daily Mail

Now four in every 10 new home loans will last into retirement

- By John-Paul Ford Rojas Associate City Editor

FOUR in ten mortgages are being taken out by borrowers who will still be repaying the loans past their retirement age, Bank of England figures show.

It means tens of thousands of home buyers have committed to repayments that stretch into their late 60s in order to afford to get on to the housing ladder or move up to a bigger property.

The figures were described yesterday as ‘truly extraordin­ary’ by former pensions minister Steve Webb, who said he was ‘genuinely shocked’.

The Bank’s figures showed that nearly 50 per cent of mortgages issued in the fourth quarter of last year were for terms of 30 years or more. And for 40 per cent of new mortgages, ‘borrowers would be past the current state pension age at the end of their mortgage term’, equating to about 90,000 loans.

The Bank warned that the trend could affect the future ‘resilience’ of borrowers and lenders.

Mr Webb, now a partner at pensions consultant­s LCP, said: ‘In the past you might have assumed that a lender would want a mortgage paid off by the time someone had stopped earning and reached pension age.

‘If it becomes the norm that a significan­t proportion of mortgages are planned to run on into retirement – and that’s before any further extensions dur8.3 ing the lifetime to the mortgage – this would be a profound shift.’

He said mortgage lenders should be ‘thinking very carefully about the wisdom of offering mortgages which will need to be paid even when someone is no longer a wage earner’.

The figures come as buyers face a continuing squeeze from high interest rates and increases in the cost of living. In England, the average cost of a home was times the average salary in 2023. That has soared from 3.5 in 1997, but is lower than 2021 when it peaked at 9.1.

The lack of affordabil­ity has meant buyers are increasing­ly opting for longerterm mortgage deals.

In the past, 25-year mortgages were seen as the norm. Data published by trade body UK Finance this month showed that 23 per cent of first-time buyers were signing up to mortgages with terms of more than 35 years.

The Bank assessed the trend of longerterm mortgages in an update from its financial policy committee, which monitors risks to the financial system.

‘Think about the wisdom of this’

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