news | 8 months ago | Tara Sammons

Over half of portfolio landlords planning to refinance in the next year

Landlord research carried out by mortgage market specialist Pegasus Insight shows a wave of refinancing among BTL landlords, driven by the end of fixed-term deals and shifting portfolio strategies.


Of those refinancing, over two-thirds stayed with their existing lender; one in three remortgaged and one in three took a product transfer.

One in four (26%) remortgaged to a different lender, with that proportion rising to 37% among landlords with 11 or more rental properties. Pegasus Insight suggested this indicates a greater willingness to shop around among experienced operators managing larger portfolios.

According to the research, 64% of landlords said they did not face any challenges when their BTL mortgage came to the end of its fixed term.

Of the 36% who did face a challenge, higher interest rates, higher fees and problems with valuations were cited as the major obstacles.

Pegasus’ research revealed 40% of leveraged landlords say they will remortgage or take a product transfer in the next 12 months, rising to 53% among portfolio landlords with four or more BTL mortgages.

For landlords planning to refinance, the most valued criteria for a new deal are competitive interest rates (84%) and low upfront fees (63%), followed by the ability to repay early without penalty (26%).

Reflecting the existing ownership landscape, the report found 77% of properties will be refinanced in a personal name, and 22% in a limited company.

Bethan Cooke, director at Pegasus Insight, commented: “The expiry of fixed rates has created a refinancing flashpoint, particularly for portfolio landlords faced with multiple mortgages maturing within a short timeframe.

“These landlords are pragmatic and commercially focused; the data suggests that they are more likely to seek out competitive terms from new lenders, weigh up incorporation strategies and look for support to manage their refinancing pipeline efficiently.

“Refinancing is not just a transactional moment, it’s a strategic inflection point for many landlords.

“With margins under pressure and confidence still fragile, landlords are thinking carefully about their costs and looking for product flexibility.

“For portfolio landlords in particular, this is about streamlining complexity and making their finance work harder.

“That’s where brokers can add real value, not just in sourcing deals, but in helping landlords structure their borrowing for the long term.”

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