mortgages

UK Mortgage Overpayment Calculator Guide: How Much Can You Save?

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Overpaying your mortgage is one of the highest guaranteed-return financial moves available in the UK. If your mortgage rate is 4.5%, overpaying is effectively a guaranteed 4.5% return on that money — better than most savings accounts after tax. But it's not always the right move for everyone. This guide helps you work out exactly how much you could save and whether mortgage overpayments belong in your financial plan.

How Mortgage Overpayments Work

Every pound you overpay on your mortgage reduces your outstanding balance. This means you pay less interest on that amount for every remaining year of your mortgage. The earlier in your mortgage term you overpay, the more interest you save — because interest is calculated on your outstanding balance each month. A £200/month overpayment on a £200,000 mortgage at 4.5% over 25 years could save over £25,000 in interest and cut 5+ years off your term.
  • Overpayments reduce your outstanding balance immediately
  • Less balance = less interest charged each month
  • Earlier overpayments save more interest than later ones
  • Most fixed-rate mortgages allow 10% of balance overpayment per year penalty-free

Calculating Your Overpayment Savings

Use the formula: first establish your current balance, interest rate, and remaining term. Then use a mortgage overpayment calculator (available free from MoneySavingExpert, banks and comparison sites). As a rough guide for a £200,000 mortgage at 4.5% with 20 years remaining: an extra £100/month saves approximately £12,000 in interest and reduces the term by 2 years. An extra £300/month saves approximately £30,000 and cuts 5+ years from the term.
  • £100/month extra on £200k at 4.5%: saves ~£12,000, cuts ~2 years
  • £300/month extra on £200k at 4.5%: saves ~£30,000, cuts ~5 years
  • £500/month extra on £200k at 4.5%: saves ~£42,000, cuts ~7 years
  • Use MoneySavingExpert's free mortgage overpayment calculator for your exact figures

The 10% Overpayment Limit — What It Means

Most fixed-rate mortgage deals in the UK allow you to overpay up to 10% of your outstanding balance per calendar year without early repayment charges (ERCs). If you overpay more than this, you'll typically be charged 1–3% of the excess amount. Tracker and variable rate mortgages often have no overpayment limit. Always check your mortgage terms before making significant lump-sum overpayments.
  • Fixed rate mortgages: typically 10% of outstanding balance per year penalty-free
  • Example: £180,000 balance = up to £18,000 overpayment per year
  • Exceeding limit: typically 1–3% early repayment charge on excess
  • Check your mortgage offer document for your specific terms
  • Tracker mortgages: usually unlimited overpayments

Mortgage Overpayment vs Savings: Which Wins?

The maths is straightforward: compare your mortgage interest rate to the after-tax return on savings. If your mortgage rate is 4.5% and you pay 40% income tax on savings interest, you need a savings rate above 7.5% gross to beat overpaying the mortgage. In most scenarios in 2026, overpaying your mortgage wins. However, if you haven't used your ISA allowance, you can shelter savings interest from tax — making the comparison closer. See /blog/overpaying-mortgage-vs-investing-uk for a deeper analysis.
  • Mortgage rate 4.5% + basic rate taxpayer: need 5.6% savings rate to match
  • Mortgage rate 4.5% + higher rate taxpayer: need 7.5% savings rate to match
  • If using ISA for savings, compare gross mortgage rate to gross ISA rate
  • Always maintain emergency fund before making mortgage overpayments

When NOT to Overpay Your Mortgage

Overpaying isn't always the best move. You should prioritise these before mortgage overpayments: building a 3-6 month emergency fund (you can't easily access mortgage overpayments in a crisis), clearing high-interest debt (credit cards, personal loans at higher rates than your mortgage), getting full employer pension match (free money), and using your ISA allowance (especially Stocks and Shares ISA for long-term investment). Once these are covered, mortgage overpayments become compelling.
Can I get my overpayments back if I need cash?+

Only if your mortgage has an 'overpayment reserve' or 'flexible' feature. Standard mortgages don't let you access overpayments. A mortgage offset account is an alternative that keeps savings accessible while reducing interest.

Should I reduce my monthly payment or shorten my term when overpaying?+

Ask your lender to shorten your term rather than reduce monthly payment. This saves more interest overall and you maintain the discipline of higher payments.

#mortgage overpayment#mortgage#uk mortgage#save money

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