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Mortgage Question (Halifax) - Five Year Fixed

ForeverAddickted
Posts: 94,305
As the title says... Have a five year fixed rate with Halifax that comes to an end around this time next year.
Had a letter from them today, they're going to start doing an extra check on Mortgages each year - To make sure that the Monthly Payments are on track
Letter says they'll do this even if you have Fixed Interest rate
It does go on to say that the Annual Statement will state if your Payment can change, and there is a "Things you need to Know" section in the letter which helps
"Some" reasons that can cause a Monthly Payment to Change are as follows, neither of which apply for me:
But always presumed that a Fixed Mortgage, was a set Payment for however many years that the agreed rate was for, and then at the end of it, it becomes a variable one
Or am I being an idiot and worrying about nothing here?
Had a letter from them today, they're going to start doing an extra check on Mortgages each year - To make sure that the Monthly Payments are on track
Letter says they'll do this even if you have Fixed Interest rate
It does go on to say that the Annual Statement will state if your Payment can change, and there is a "Things you need to Know" section in the letter which helps
"Some" reasons that can cause a Monthly Payment to Change are as follows, neither of which apply for me:
- OverPayments (can see Payments go down)
- Fees or Charges added (Payments could go up)
But always presumed that a Fixed Mortgage, was a set Payment for however many years that the agreed rate was for, and then at the end of it, it becomes a variable one
Or am I being an idiot and worrying about nothing here?
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ForeverAddickted said:As the title says... Have a five year fixed rate with Halifax that comes to an end around this time next year.
Had a letter from them today, they're going to start doing an extra check on Mortgages each year - To make sure that the Monthly Payments are on track
Letter says they'll do this even if you have Fixed Interest rate
It does go on to say that the Annual Statement will state if your Payment can change, and there is a "Things you need to Know" section in the letter which helps
"Some" reasons that can cause a Monthly Payment to Change are as follows, neither of which apply for me:- OverPayments (can see Payments go down)
- Fees or Charges added (Payments could go up)
But always presumed that a Fixed Mortgage, was a set Payment for however many years that the agreed rate was for, and then at the end of it, it becomes a variable one
Or am I being an idiot and worrying about nothing here?
I assume it's due to the new Consumer Duty regulations which come into force on 1st July and just basically more paperwork & no substance.
Everyone will get a statement even if nothing has changed. Just more bureaucratic nonsense dreamt up by someone to keep themselves in a job.
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golfaddick said:ForeverAddickted said:As the title says... Have a five year fixed rate with Halifax that comes to an end around this time next year.
Had a letter from them today, they're going to start doing an extra check on Mortgages each year - To make sure that the Monthly Payments are on track
Letter says they'll do this even if you have Fixed Interest rate
It does go on to say that the Annual Statement will state if your Payment can change, and there is a "Things you need to Know" section in the letter which helps
"Some" reasons that can cause a Monthly Payment to Change are as follows, neither of which apply for me:- OverPayments (can see Payments go down)
- Fees or Charges added (Payments could go up)
But always presumed that a Fixed Mortgage, was a set Payment for however many years that the agreed rate was for, and then at the end of it, it becomes a variable one
Or am I being an idiot and worrying about nothing here?
I assume it's due to the new Consumer Duty regulations which are basically more paperwork & no substance.
Everyone will get a statement even if nothing has changed. Just more bureaucratic nonsense dreamt up by someone to keep themselves in a job.0 -
My current two year fixed rate is due to finish at the end of January 2024. I can now tie in a new rate from that date. Is going to be a pretty big hike. Is it worth committing to a new rate now or bide my time to see if the interest rates fall between now and January?0
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Don’t think rates will be coming down before that date. More a case of how many more rate rises will there be before that.2
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sirjohnhumphrey said:My current two year fixed rate is due to finish at the end of January 2024. I can now tie in a new rate from that date. Is going to be a pretty big hike. Is it worth committing to a new rate now or bide my time to see if the interest rates fall between now and January?1
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sirjohnhumphrey said:My current two year fixed rate is due to finish at the end of January 2024. I can now tie in a new rate from that date. Is going to be a pretty big hike. Is it worth committing to a new rate now or bide my time to see if the interest rates fall between now and January?2
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McBobbin said:sirjohnhumphrey said:My current two year fixed rate is due to finish at the end of January 2024. I can now tie in a new rate from that date. Is going to be a pretty big hike. Is it worth committing to a new rate now or bide my time to see if the interest rates fall between now and January?3
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SotonAddick said:McBobbin said:sirjohnhumphrey said:My current two year fixed rate is due to finish at the end of January 2024. I can now tie in a new rate from that date. Is going to be a pretty big hike. Is it worth committing to a new rate now or bide my time to see if the interest rates fall between now and January?0
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sirjohnhumphrey said:SotonAddick said:McBobbin said:sirjohnhumphrey said:My current two year fixed rate is due to finish at the end of January 2024. I can now tie in a new rate from that date. Is going to be a pretty big hike. Is it worth committing to a new rate now or bide my time to see if the interest rates fall between now and January?3
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I would be looking at a 2 year if I had to fix now (maybe a 3), a 5 year if you asked me a year ago, which I did myself at 3%.
Rates (in my opinion) are going to be roughly where they are for the next 1.5-2 years, although I also think inflation targets for western developed nations will be more like 3-4% rather than 2% in the next economic cycle.1 - Sponsored links:
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You should be fine to go for a deal now and switch if something better comes along. We had a new deal kick in in July. We signed up to a deal in Feb then were able to switch when a better deal came along in Apr. Both were NatWest and we used a mortgage broker.1
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redman said:sirjohnhumphrey said:My current two year fixed rate is due to finish at the end of January 2024. I can now tie in a new rate from that date. Is going to be a pretty big hike. Is it worth committing to a new rate now or bide my time to see if the interest rates fall between now and January?
Thing is, no one knows what is going to happen over the next 4-6 months. Perceived wisdom a few months ago was that interest rates would peak at 5% & start falling by the end of the year. Now the BOE are saying that rates might have to go up again & stay at that rate well into 2024. No one really knows.
Also quite a few commentators are saying the BOE are wrong with their strategy and rates should be starting to be cut asap.
5 years is a long time & rates could be back below 3% within the next 3 years or so. Being tied into 6% in 3 years time when rates are half that could be very hard to swallow for some people.
A 3 year rate maybe the way to go.2 -
If rates are falling in the months before you have to renew it might even be worth 2 or 3 months on a variable to secure a better fixed rate.
I expect intrest rates to peek this autumn and start falling early next year, but 3-4% will be the new medium term "normal" not 2 and under like we have seen for the last 15 odd years. Unfortunately.0 -
Cafc43v3r said:If rates are falling in the months before you have to renew it might even be worth 2 or 3 months on a variable to secure a better fixed rate.
I expect intrest rates to peek this autumn and start falling early next year, but 3-4% will be the new medium term "normal" not 2 and under like we have seen for the last 15 odd years. Unfortunately.4 -
PrincessFiona said:Cafc43v3r said:If rates are falling in the months before you have to renew it might even be worth 2 or 3 months on a variable to secure a better fixed rate.
I expect intrest rates to peek this autumn and start falling early next year, but 3-4% will be the new medium term "normal" not 2 and under like we have seen for the last 15 odd years. Unfortunately.0 -
Cafc43v3r said:PrincessFiona said:Cafc43v3r said:If rates are falling in the months before you have to renew it might even be worth 2 or 3 months on a variable to secure a better fixed rate.
I expect intrest rates to peek this autumn and start falling early next year, but 3-4% will be the new medium term "normal" not 2 and under like we have seen for the last 15 odd years. Unfortunately.0 -
Cafc43v3r said:If rates are falling in the months before you have to renew it might even be worth 2 or 3 months on a variable to secure a better fixed rate.
I expect intrest rates to peek this autumn and start falling early next year, but 3-4% will be the new medium term "normal" not 2 and under like we have seen for the last 15 odd years. Unfortunately.
However, a report out this weekend suggests the BOE forecasts have been wrong since the pandemic & have over estimated where inflation would be 6-9 months hence.1 -
You could always take the talal approach and just pay it all off now to save on your monthly budget for the next 25 years… :-)7
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AFKABartram said:You could always take the talal approach and just pay it all off now to save on your monthly budget for the next 25 years… :-)4