Are falling interest rates giving Buy To Let a new lease of life? 

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New data from mortgage lenders’ trade body UK Finance suggests that in the last quarter of 2024, the average buy-to-let interest rate for new mortgage loans taken out was 5.09%. 

This was a drop of 0.61% on the previous year. 

Sarah Thompson, managing director of finance company Mortgage Scout, says the reduced rates may be helping renew investment in buy to let: the number of loans for new BTL purchases was up by more than 46% in Q4 2024 versus the same period in 2023.

She comments: “It’s essential to bear in mind that through 2022 and 2023, inflation was peaking, and in the summer of 2023, the base rate reached a 15-year high. There was economic and political instability, a cost-of-living crisis, and considerable uncertainty about rental reforms for England. So, low levels of new BTL investment at the end of 2023 weren’t only due to mortgage rates, and the resurgence over the past six months has probably also been due to pent-up appetite from landlords”.

But she says that nevertheless, the rise in the number of landlords buying and remortgaging (total new loans are up nearly 40% year-over-year) is undoubtedly at least partly due to more attractive interest rates. 

She adds: “Fixed-rate mortgages are continuing to increase in popularity, with more than two thirds of landlords choosing fixed rate products and the number of these loans up 4.4% on Q4 2023.

“Lower rates typically mean lower monthly repayments, and this is reflected in the average rental yield, which was 7% in the last quarter of 2024, up almost a quarter of a percentage point from the previous year.”

Mortgage Scout is part of the LRG group and Thompson says the latest customer survey across LRG revealed that almost a quarter of landlords planned to increase their portfolio in 2025.

Contact one of our highly experienced mortgage advisors today on 0121 500 6316 to discuss your mortgage needs.

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