Tracker Mortgage
A variable mortgage that usually follows a reference rate plus a margin.
Read term →A fixed-rate mortgage is a mortgage where the interest rate stays the same for a set period, so your monthly payments are easier to plan.
A fixed-rate mortgage is a mortgage where the interest rate stays the same for an agreed period, meaning your monthly payment is predictable during that fixed-rate period.
With a fixed-rate mortgage, the lender agrees to keep your mortgage interest rate the same for a set number of years. During that fixed period, your payment should stay the same even if wider interest rates move up or down.
A fixed-rate mortgage is often described as a two-year fix, five-year fix or ten-year fix. That number is the fixed-rate deal period, not the full mortgage term.
Your monthly payment is calculated using the mortgage amount, mortgage term and fixed interest rate. The fixed rate stays in place until the fixed-rate period ends.
During the fixed-rate period:
interest rate stays the same
monthly payment is predictable
rate rises do not increase the fixed payment
rate falls do not reduce the fixed payment
When the fixed period ends:
switch product, remortgage, or move to SVR
When the fixed-rate period ends, your mortgage does not end. Unless you choose a new product or remortgage, your lender will usually move the mortgage onto its standard variable rate.
If you take a five-year fixed-rate mortgage at 4.5%, the interest rate is fixed at 4.5% for five years. Your monthly mortgage payment is based on that rate during the fixed period.
Key point: a fixed rate protects your payment during the fixed period, but you still need to plan for what happens when the deal ends.
Use the UK Mortgage Repayment Calculator to estimate monthly payments using a fixed-rate assumption.
Fixed-rate mortgages matter because they give payment certainty. This can make budgeting easier, especially if your mortgage payment is one of your largest household costs.
A fixed-rate mortgage gives certainty. A tracker mortgage moves with a tracked rate, usually plus a margin. That means a tracker can become cheaper if the tracked rate falls, but it can also become more expensive if the tracked rate rises.
| Feature | Fixed-rate mortgage | Tracker mortgage |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly payment | Predictable during the fixed period | Can rise or fall |
| Main benefit | Budget certainty | Possible benefit if the tracked rate falls |
| Main risk | You may miss out if rates fall | Your payment may rise if the tracked rate rises |
| Usually suits | Borrowers who value stability | Borrowers who can handle payment changes |
The right option depends on your budget, risk tolerance, product fees, early repayment charges and how long you expect to keep the mortgage.
When the fixed period ends, you usually have three choices: switch to a new deal with the same lender, remortgage to another lender, or move onto the lender’s standard variable rate.
Practical step: check your fixed-rate end date early so you have time to compare options before the deal ends.
A fixed-rate mortgage may suit borrowers who want certainty and would find payment increases difficult to absorb.