2 in 5 mortgages set to run past pension age

New figures show that mortgage lending past pension age is now an "entrenched feature of the mortgage market".

Related topics:  Later Life,  Mortgages
Rozi Jones | Editor, Financial Reporter
2nd December 2024
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"There is increasing evidence that taking out a mortgage which runs past pension age is an entrenched feature of the mortgage market rather than a temporary blip. "
- Steve Webb, partner at pension consultants LCP

New data on mortgage lending from the Bank of England shows that lending into retirement has remained at a high level despite falling mortgage rates.

The latest data, obtained by LCP partner and former pensions minister Steve Webb, shows that in Q2 2024, just over 2 in 5 of all new mortgages had terms which run past pension age. This compares with barely 3 in 10 new mortgages at the end of 2021.

In total it is estimated that over a million new mortgages have been issued since the end of 2021 with terms running past pension age.

Over the last two years (from 2022 to 2024), the growth in new long-term mortgages seems to have happened primarily at younger ages, with a 30% increase in the number of under forties taking out mortgages set to run into retirement.

One reason for longer mortgage terms may be affordability, with younger borrowers opting for extended terms in response to high interest rates. However, despite mortgage rates now seeming to be on a downward trajectory, the proportion of new mortgages with these long durations remains at around 2 in 5.

Steve Webb, partner at pension consultants LCP, said: “There is increasing evidence that taking out a mortgage which runs past pension age is an entrenched feature of the mortgage market rather than a temporary blip. This has profound implications for retirement planning, as it is likely to mean that savers may end up using up already inadequate pension pots to clear a mortgage balance. 

"Anyone involved in helping today’s workers plan for their retirement must now factor in the possibility that housing costs will run into retirement or will have to be funded from already meagre pension pots."

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