Buyer confidence returns as average monthly mortgage payments fall £119: Rightmove

Average monthly mortgage payments are 7% lower than a year ago, despite the average price of a home rising by 0.5% year-on-year.

Related topics:  House prices,  Mortgage rates
Rozi Jones | Editor, Financial Reporter
19th February 2026
house price coin down

The national average monthly mortgage payment is £1,592 in January, £119 lower than at the same time last year, the latest Rightmove data shows.

Rightmove’s analysis uses its daily mortgage rate data and property asking price data to calculate residential mortgage payments. Mortgage payments are based on average two-year fixed rates with a circa £999 fee and based on 95% of the mortgage market, excluding specialist lending. The calculations assume buyers have a 20% deposit and spread the cost of their mortgage over 25 years.

The national average monthly mortgage payment decreased by £119 (7%) year-on-year for new buyers in January due to a combination of average mortgage rate drops and slower house price growth.

The average two-year fixed mortgage rate was 4.23% in January, down from 4.99% in January 2025. Meanwhile, national average asking prices were only up by 0.5% year-on-year, standing at £368,031 in January.

While buyers are looking at notable savings compared to last year due to mortgage rate drops, a big monthly increase in property prices this January means that buyers face paying a little more on a new mortgage than they would have in December.

The national average monthly mortgage payment is £35 more than it was in December 2025 when the national average asking price was £358,138.

The average asking price for a typical first-time buyer home was £225,544 in January, and the average first-time buyer monthly mortgage payment was £975, down from £1,062 at this time last year. A 20% deposit would equate to £45,109 based on January’s average asking price.

London buyers have seen the biggest year-on-year drops in monthly mortgage payments of £207, due to higher house prices.

New buyers in the North East will see the least benefit from lower mortgage rates compared to purchasing last year. This is because homes are cheapest in the North East, but also because asking prices have risen faster here, with higher prices offsetting some of the savings of lower mortgage rates.

Rightmove’s monthly confidence tracker measures the sentiments of home-owners, renters, prospective first-time buyers and landlords towards the market. It shows that net confidence among buyers and sellers in January returned to its highest level since September 2025. 

Matt Smith, Rightmove’s mortgage expert, commented: “We saw some headline grabbing low mortgage rates being offered by lenders at the end of 2025 and into January, which saw average rates drop to their lowest level since before the mini-Budget. Since then, rates have stabilised and even ticked up marginally in places as the cost of funding mortgages has become more expensive, due to global and domestic economic events.”

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