Quick Summary: The UK mortgage calculator determines monthly repayments and Stamp Duty Land Tax. For a £380,000 home with a 15% deposit (£57,000) at 4.75% over 25 years, the monthly payment is approximately £1,845. Standard Stamp Duty (SDLT) is £6,500, which drops to £0 for first-time buyers.
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Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT)
| Property Value Band | Standard Rate | First-Time Buyer | Second Home / BTL | Non-Resident |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Up to £250,000 | 0% | 0% | 3% | 2% |
| £250,001 – £425,000 | 5% | 0% (FTB relief) | 8% | 7% |
| £425,001 – £925,000 | 5% | 5% | 8% | 7% |
| £925,001 – £1,500,000 | 10% | 10% | 13% | 12% |
| Above £1,500,000 | 12% | 12% | 15% | 14% |
Core Mortgage Tools
UK Resources & Government
Understanding United Kingdom Mortgage Guidelines
First-Time Buyer SDLT Relief Bands
First-time buyers in the UK qualify for Stamp Duty relief on properties priced up to £625,000. If eligible, you pay 0% Stamp Duty on properties priced up to £425,000, and a discounted rate of 5% on the portion between £425,001 and £625,000. If the property price exceeds £625,000, no first-time buyer relief applies and you pay standard rates.
Repayment vs. Interest-Only Mortgage Options
UK lenders primarily offer two payment structures:
- Repayment Mortgage: Standard monthly repayments cover both the interest and a portion of the original loan balance, ensuring the debt is fully cleared by the end of the term (typically 25 or 30 years).
- Interest-Only Mortgage: Monthly repayments cover only the interest accrued on the debt. The original balance remains fully outstanding and must be repaid via an independent investment strategy at term closure.
How UK Mortgage Interest Math Works
UK mortgage repayments are calculated using standard compound interest, based on the principal loan size:
Where:
EMI = Monthly repayments in GBP
P = Principal loan amount (property value − deposit)
r = Monthly interest rate (annual interest rate ÷ 12 ÷ 100)
n = Number of repayments (mortgage term in years × 12)
Putting down at least a 10% deposit (resulting in 90% LTV) significantly decreases starting interest rates compared to a 5% deposit. A 20% deposit (80% LTV) unlocks prime lender rate tiers.
Property investors and second-home purchasers must add a flat 3% surcharge to the standard SDLT bands. Check Buy-to-Let tax calculators to audit additional cash requirements.
UK Mortgage Frequently Asked Questions
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Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) is a tax paid when you buy a property or land over a certain threshold in England and Northern Ireland. The tax rate is tiered, meaning you pay different percentages on different bands of the property price. As of 2026, standard stamp duty rates start at 0% for properties up to £250,000, 5% on the portion between £250,001 and £925,000, and up to 12% on portions above £1.5 million.
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First-time buyers in the UK qualify for Stamp Duty relief on properties priced up to £625,000. If eligible, you pay 0% Stamp Duty on properties priced up to £425,000, and a discounted rate of 5% on the portion between £425,001 and £625,000. If the property price exceeds £625,000, no first-time buyer relief applies and you pay standard rates.
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A repayment mortgage requires monthly payments that cover both the interest and a portion of the original loan balance, ensuring the loan is completely paid off by the end of the term. An interest-only mortgage requires paying only the interest accrued each month, meaning the monthly payment is lower but the original debt remains fully outstanding and must be repaid via a separate repayment strategy at the end of the term.
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Most UK lenders limit borrowing to approximately 4.5 times your gross annual income (or combined income for joint applications). Lenders also audit your monthly expenses (affordability assessment) under a stress test to ensure you can support payments if interest rates rise.
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A fixed-rate mortgage locks your interest rate for a set period (usually 2, 5, or 10 years), offering payment certainty. A tracker mortgage variable rate tracks a benchmark (normally the Bank of England base rate) plus a fixed margin (e.g. Base + 0.50%), meaning payments rise or fall in tandem with central bank policies.
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An Agreement in Principle (AIP), also called a Decision in Principle (DIP), is a document from a lender indicating how much they are willing to lend you in theory. It does not guarantee a mortgage but shows estate agents you are a serious buyer when making an offer.