Eight mortgage predictions for 2026

Last year was all about falling mortgage rates, with four cuts by the Bank of England taking the base rate from 4.75% at the start of the year to 3.75% by December. For the most part, mortgage lenders responded by lowering their rates.

What 2026 will hold for the mortgage market is harder to predict: will rates continue their downward trajectory? Will the accessibility criteria be relaxed? How will the mortgage market support first-time buyers? We spoke to five mortgage experts to understand what will happen with products, rates and the market in general.

After multiple rate cuts in 2025, everyone agrees there will be fewer this year, with our experts predicting between one and two. “I expect that the Bank of England will opt for two interest rate cuts this year: one in the spring around April and one at the end of the year. Due to the weakening of the economy and the easing of inflation,” says John Everest, director of Everest Mortgage Services.

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“We expect around two more rate cuts from the Bank of England by the end of the year,” says Richard Dana, founder and CEO of Tembo. “However, the pace of easing is likely to be gradual as recent data suggests the economy appears more resilient in terms of both inflation and growth.”

Nicole Zalys, founder at Villiers & Co, was more reserved and predicted there was more likely to be one cut than two. “Markets are predicting a definitive cut and a 30% chance of a second cut happening. While rates should probably come down, it’s unlikely we’ll be back to ultra-cheap loans any time soon,” she says.

At the end of 2025, lenders were reducing their affordability criteria across the board, and while this will continue into 2026, our experts believe it will be limited to certain borrowers.

“We’re already seeing the eligibility criteria bend for certain groups, including the self-employed and foreign nationals,” says Dana. “Rather than a general loosening for everyone, we are more likely to see targeted flexibility, where lenders refine their criteria to better reflect modern working patterns and a more diverse borrower base.”

“In general, I would expect some easing for professionals on stable incomes (teachers, NHS, civil servants), self-employed borrowers with 2-3 years of clean, consistent accounts and directors of limited companies with retained profits,” says Zalys.

Everest agrees and reports that he has heard of a lender that will “give teachers and education professionals seven times their income, which is unheard of before.”

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