Truss blamed for £150-a-week rise in mortgage bills after disastrous mini-Budget
Homeowners are being hit by an average rise of almost £8,000 in mortgage interest payments after borrowing rates trebled in two years, Labour warns.
Analysis found the average household is shelling out an extra £150 every week – £7,800 per year.
It means the average person getting a new mortgage deal now pays £223 a week in mortgage interest payments alone – up from £71 in 2021.
People with a 75% loan-to-value mortgage faced a typical interest rate of 4.63% in April, which is three times the 1.49% charged two years earlier. Labour blamed skyrocketing rates on former Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng ’s disastrous mini-Budget during Liz Truss ’s brief stint as PM last year.
Hundreds of fixed-rate mortgage deals were axed from the market last weekend, with some lenders pulling their entire range. Pat McFadden, Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury, said: “Homeowners continue to suffer thanks to the Tories’ reckless economic gamble.
Teachers, civil servants and train drivers walk out in biggest strike in decade“This Tory mortgage penalty has increased the cost of home ownership, causing huge worry for families.”
The Treasury said: “Central banks around the world are raising interest rates to combat high inflation. We are providing around £3,300 per household to help with rising costs.”