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PRIVACY
Economic Development

What º£½ÇÊÓÆµ interest rate rise means for mortgages and savings

A financial expert explains what the Bank of England's interest rate increase means for borrowers and savers

An expert explains how the latest interest rate rise could impact º£½ÇÊÓÆµ households(Image: Getty Images)

Interest rates have gone up again for the third time in just a matter of months.

The Bank of England increased rates from 0.5% to 0.75% on Thursday (March 17) and predicted inflation - the increase in the price of goods and services - could reach a whopping 8% by June.

But what does this mean for borrowers and savers?

Higher interest rates mean the cost of borrowing is likely to rise, with some households facing increases in their mortgages.

Savers, meanwhile, are unlikely to feel the benefit of increased savings rates as the cost of living continues to surge.

According to financial firm Interactive Investor, higher interest rates are likely to have a particular impact on homeowners with variable rate mortgages.

For homeowners with an 80% loan-to-value capital repayment mortgage over 25 years on a property valued at £278,123 (the average º£½ÇÊÓÆµ house price), the rates increase means those on a typical two-year tracker mortgage deal could end up paying £27 a month more.

Meanwhile, those on the average standard variable rate could face an additional repayment burden of £32 a month, Interactive Investor said.