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Bank of England cuts base rate to 4.75% – what it means for you and how much further it could fall
MSE_Emily
Posts: 213 MSE Staff
The base rate has been cut to 4.75% from 5% by the Bank of England. This rate is used by the central bank to charge other banks and lenders when they borrow money, so the move can impact mortgage and savings rates...
Read the full story:
Bank of England cuts base rate to 4.75% – what it means for you and how much further it could fall
Bank of England cuts base rate to 4.75% – what it means for you and how much further it could fall
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Sitting in the celebration corner with my tracker folks

Note:I'm FTB, not an expert, all my comments are from personal experience and not a professional advice.Mortgage debt start date = 25/10/2024 = 175k (5.44% interest rate, 20 year term)- Q4/2024 = 139.3k (5.19% interest rate)
- Q1/2025 = 125.3k (interest rate dropped from 5.19% - 4.69%)
- Q2/2025 = 108.9K (interest rate 4.44%)
- Q3/2025 = 92.2k (interest rate dropped from 4.44% to 4.19%)
- Q4/2025 = 76.5k (interest rate 4.19%)
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Question to Martin - yet again Nationwide refuses to cut its BMR mortgage rate so I and many others will see no cut in their repayments. This is at least the 2nd time in a row Nationwide has not cut its BMR rate following the BoE cut. How can they justify this? Nationwide seems to only reward certain members despite all its guff about how great it is to be a member of a building society rather than a bank customer. Members like me get zero from them.0
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hakufax increased the other week, to drop ,,,,,Don't put your trust into an Experian score - it is not a number any bank will ever use & it is generally a waste of money to purchase it. They are also selling you insurance you dont need.0
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Mortgage rates are controlled by the money markets, in particular the "10 Year Yield", we will probably see mortgage rates rising soon as bond market volatility increases with Trump`s tariff policy, why not put some money into a money market fund held in an ISA to capture some of this volatility and use the monthly dividends as extra mortgage payments?PCulbert1 said:Question to Martin - yet again Nationwide refuses to cut its BMR mortgage rate so I and many others will see no cut in their repayments. This is at least the 2nd time in a row Nationwide has not cut its BMR rate following the BoE cut. How can they justify this? Nationwide seems to only reward certain members despite all its guff about how great it is to be a member of a building society rather than a bank customer. Members like me get zero from them.0 -
Hi all. Just wanted to flag that we've updated this story with a table on what the major lenders are doing to their rates, and what we know so far about savings rates too:
Bank of England cuts base rate to 4.75% – what it means for you and how much further it could fall
Thanks!1
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