Borrowing costs are expected to fall to their lowest level since early 2023, as the Bank of England prepares to cut interest rates.
The Bank is widely expected to reduce its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points today, following signs of a weakening labour market and a larger-than-forecast fall in inflation. The developments have eased pressure on policymakers to maintain restrictive borrowing costs.
Market pricing suggests a 98% chance that the Monetary Policy Committee will lower the base rate from 4% to 3.75%, which would take borrowing costs to their lowest level since early 2023.
Matt Harrison, customer success director at Finova Broker, commented: “Next year is set to be a big year for refinancing, with 1.8 million mortgages due to mature according to UK Finance. Many of these borrowers have been happily sat on a pandemic deal of less than 3% for the last five years but are now looking down the barrel of a significant increase in monthly repayments as rates stand.
“A cut to the base rate, followed by another in the new year, could make a big difference to available interest rates and ease affordability pressures for borrowers. With inflation falling, the Monetary Policy Committee have no reason not to give borrowers what they need.”


