Rates shown are indicative only and used for illustrative purposes. Actual rates vary by lender, product, borrower profile and market conditions at the time of application.
| LTV | Term | £2000 fee (weekly change) | £1000 fee (weekly change) | £0 fee (weekly change) | 5% fee (weekly change) | 2% fee (weekly change) |
|---|
| 60% | 2-year fixed | 4.01% (-0.02%) | 4.24% (+0.00%) | 4.38% (-0.01%) | - | - |
| 60% | 5-year fixed | 4.23% (-0.01%) | 4.32% (+0.00%) | 4.33% (-0.01%) | - | - |
| 75% | 2-year fixed | 4.60% (-0.01%) | 4.69% (+0.00%) | 4.85% (+0.00%) | 3.97% (+0.00%) | 4.95% (+0.00%) |
| 75% | 5-year fixed | 4.75% (-0.01%) | 4.71% (-0.02%) | 4.79% (+0.00%) | 4.99% (+0.00%) | 5.29% (+0.00%) |
A shift towards refinancing rather than expansion
BTL mortgage pricing in late 2025 was being driven less by base rate headlines and more by swap rate expectations, lender appetite, and rental affordability stress testing. While the Bank of England cut the base rate to 3.75% in December 2025, many landlords will only feel the benefit indirectly, as fixed-rate pricing responds to expectations of where rates go next rather than where they are today.
UK Finance highlights that the dominant trend into 2026 is refinancing rather than expansion, with around 1.8 million fixed-rate deals ending in 2026 and external remortgaging forecast to rise by around 10% year-on-year.
The Bank of England plans to ease bank capital rules to around 13% to boost lending, after stress tests confirmed the UK’s major banks remain financially resilient. As The Guardian reports, for the first time in a decade, capital rules for high street banks are set to relax, scaling back regulations that came into effect following the 2008 crisis.
The move is designed to make it easier for banks to provide loans to consumers and businesses.
Ollie’s Opinion
If you’re a landlord looking at rates right now, the biggest red flag I see is focusing purely on the headline percentage and ignoring whether the deal actually works under lender stress tests. In practice, BTL success or failure is far more often about rental coverage, fees and structure than whether the rate starts with a 4 or a 5.
Yes, rates are easing, and competition is creeping back in — but this isn’t 2021 and it’s not going to be. The smarter landlords are the ones optimising what they already own, locking in sensible cashflow, and stress-testing their own portfolios properly rather than chasing the cheapest deal on a comparison table.
Oliver Peace
BA(Hons) CeMAP DipFA
Managing Director and non-advising Firm Principal
A bit about Oliver…
After gaining his CeMAP qualification, Oliver began his career in financial services in 2007 as a mortgage adviser specialising in remortgages. In 2010, after gaining invaluable experience helping individuals and families, of all walks of life, to improve their financial situations, Oliver found the confidence to launch James Leighton Financial Services. His objective was to build a firm offering a full spectrum of financial services and whilst building a new and loyal client base, he gained his Diploma in Financial Advice, which enabled him to advise on pensions and investments. After building a relationship with a new build developer in 2011, with Oliver at the helm, the firm saw exponential growth from a sole trader to the firm that we see today, with a team of around 50 professionals, national coverage and a reputation as one of the foremost new build specialists in the country. Oliver believes that the success of the firm is down to one of the firm’s core values which is to genuinely about by focussing on improving. By treating each customer as if they are a member of the family has helped build real trust and long-term repeat business.
Oliver’s interests out of work centre around spending time with his daughter, enjoying holidays in the UK and abroad and, when he has time, furthering his passion for sportscars.s out of work centre around spending time with his daughter, enjoying holidays in the UK and abroad and, when he has time, furthering his passion for sportscars.
How BTL rates typically compare to residential mortgages
As a general rule of thumb, Buy to Let mortgage rates are often more expensive than residential mortgage rates.