'Kick in the teeth' for borrowers as major lenders hike mortgage rates
The mortgage rate war seen at the start of 2026 is well and truly over as several major lenders announced hikes.
Nationwide has increased rates by up to 0.19%, with Virgin following close behind with raises of up to 0.14%.
HSBC has also upped some of its home mover, first-time buyer and remortgage products by up to 0.1%.
It comes after Barclays recently made some price increases and product withdrawals, NatWest raised some fixed rates by 0.1% and Santander put up rates by up to 0.07%.
One broker described it as a "kick in the teeth" for borrowers, while others warned the road to lower rates could be longer than expected.
Justin Moy, managing director at mortgage brokers EHF Mortgages, said rising swap rates, which banks use to determine mortgage rates, were to blame for the increases.
"There are still some very good deals to take advantage of, but time is now of the essence for existing borrowers to get their paperwork in and secure the cheapest deals," he told Newspage.
Darryl Dhoffer, founder at brokerage The Mortgage Geezer, added: "Nationwide and Virgin Money hiking rates signals an end to January’s price war.
"This isn't a crash, but a correction: the market is realising the path to lower rates will be slower and bumpier than hoped."
Ben Perks, managing director at Orchard Financial Advisers, described the rate increases as "a kick in the teeth for borrowers that have been full of optimism lately" but said he hoped this was a blip rather than the beginning of a more material repricing in rates.
"Hopefully there will be more positive news in the coming weeks and months if inflation falls back into line and the Bank of England cuts rates further," he said.
The Bank of England is expected to hold the base rate at 3.75% this week - with markets predicting another cut by April.