Mortgage overpayments — paying more than your required monthly payment — offer a guaranteed return equal to your mortgage interest rate. On a 4.5% mortgage, every £1,000 overpaid saves approximately £45 in interest per year (compounding over the remaining term). This is risk-free, tax-free, and immediately improves your loan-to-value ratio, potentially unlocking better remortgage deals. However, the opportunity cost is significant: that same £1,000 invested in the stock market might historically return 7-10% per year (before tax), but with risk of loss. According to UK Finance, 28% of mortgage holders made at least one overpayment in 2025, with the average overpayment being £2,400. The decision isn't straightforward — it depends on your mortgage rate, investment risk tolerance, tax situation, and financial goals. This guide provides the framework to make an informed choice, including the maths to compare overpayments versus investing in ISAs or pensions. The key insight: there's no universally right answer, but there is a right answer for your specific circumstances.
How much can I overpay my mortgage without penalty?+
Most UK mortgages allow overpayments of up to 10% of the outstanding balance per year without Early Repayment Charges. Check your mortgage terms — some allow more, some less.
Is it better to overpay mortgage or invest?+
Compare your mortgage rate to your expected after-tax investment return. If mortgage rate is higher, overpay. If expected investment return is higher, invest. For a 4.5% mortgage, a basic-rate taxpayer needs investments returning over 5.625% to beat overpaying.
Do mortgage overpayments reduce monthly payments?+
Usually no — most lenders keep your monthly payment the same and reduce the term, which saves more interest. Some lenders offer the option to reduce payments instead, but this saves less overall.
Start Your Savings Journey Today
20+ savings challenges, daily tracking, and achievement badges -- all free.
Download on the App Store