Mortgages

Remortgages

Your current mortgage deal may be costing you more than it needs to. Remortgaging at the right time, with the right advice, can cut your monthly payments, release equity, or secure the flexibility your finances need.

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When your current mortgage deal ends, your lender automatically moves you onto their standard variable rate. That rate is almost always significantly higher than the best products on the market, and most homeowners spend months or even years on it without realising. On a £200,000 mortgage, reverting to a standard variable rate rather than remortgaging can cost an extra £200 or more per month. Starting your review six months before your deal expires is the single most important step you can take.

Remortgaging means switching your mortgage to a new deal, either with your existing lender or a new one, without moving home. It is one of the most effective financial actions a homeowner can take, and one of the most frequently delayed. When your current deal expires, most lenders move you onto their standard variable rate, which is almost always significantly higher than the best products available on the market. At Vsure Financial, our advisers search a broad panel of UK lenders to find the most suitable remortgage deal for your situation. We compare product transfers with your existing lender against the full market, calculate the true cost of any switching fees, and manage the entire process through to completion. Starting the review six months before your current deal expires means you never spend a single unnecessary month on an expensive standard variable rate. That discipline alone can save thousands of pounds over the life of a mortgage.

Your complete guide to Remortgages

When is the right time to remortgage?

The most common trigger for remortgaging is the end of a fixed or discounted rate period. Most deals run for two, three, or five years. When that period ends, your lender moves you automatically onto their standard variable rate, which is typically 1 to 2 per cent higher than the best available products on the market. On a £200,000 mortgage, that difference can add £150 to £250 to your monthly payment. Starting the remortgage process three to six months before your current deal expires gives you sufficient time to compare the market, complete an application, and ensure the new deal begins the day your existing one ends with no wasted time on the SVR. Many lenders will offer a rate that is locked in for up to six months in advance, allowing you to secure your new rate early while retaining the option to benefit if rates fall before the switch takes place. Your adviser will identify the optimal window for your specific deal and lender.

Product transfer versus a full remortgage: which is better?

Not every remortgage involves switching lenders. A product transfer is when you take a new deal with your existing lender at the end of your current term, typically without a full credit check, new valuation, or formal application in most cases. Product transfers are quicker and administratively simpler than a full remortgage, but they restrict you to your current lender's retention products, which may not be the most competitive. A full remortgage to a new lender takes slightly longer, typically four to six weeks, but gives you access to every deal on the market. Your Vsure adviser will compare both options with complete transparency, checking whether your current lender's retention offer is genuinely competitive against the best alternative available. The goal is always the outcome that saves you the most money over the full term of the mortgage, not the path of least resistance. In some cases the product transfer is the right answer. In others, the savings from switching are too significant to leave on the table.

Remortgaging to release equity from your home

If your property has increased in value since you originally borrowed, remortgaging can allow you to release some of that equity as a tax-free cash lump sum. Common reasons for equity release through remortgaging include funding home improvements that add lasting value, consolidating higher-interest unsecured debts into a single lower monthly payment, helping an adult child with a deposit, or funding a significant life event. It is essential to understand the full financial picture before consolidating debts into your mortgage. While your monthly outgoing may fall, you are extending the repayment period of the original debt and could pay significantly more in total interest over the longer mortgage term. Think carefully before securing other debts against your home. Your adviser will model the true total cost of both approaches so your decision is based on complete information. In some cases, a second charge loan may be a more appropriate vehicle for raising capital without disturbing an existing competitive rate.

Early repayment charges: knowing when switching early makes sense

If you want to remortgage before your current deal has ended, you will almost certainly face an early repayment charge (ERC). ERCs are typically expressed as a percentage of the outstanding loan, commonly between 1 and 5 per cent depending on how far through your fixed period you are. On a £200,000 mortgage, a 3 per cent ERC is a £6,000 cost. This does not automatically make switching the wrong decision; the numbers need to be modelled carefully. A meaningfully lower rate on a new deal can generate savings over the remaining term that exceed the ERC within a calculable break-even period. Timing also matters: if your property has increased significantly in value since you last borrowed, you may have moved into a lower loan-to-value band, unlocking materially better rates. Your adviser will calculate the break-even point, model the savings, and give you a clear recommendation based on the actual numbers, never on a rule of thumb.

Think carefully before securing other debts against your home. YOUR HOME MAY BE REPOSSESSED IF YOU DO NOT KEEP UP REPAYMENTS ON YOUR MORTGAGE. You may have to pay an early repayment charge to your existing lender if you remortgage.

Simple and Transparent

How we work with you

No jargon. No surprises. Here is exactly what happens after you reach out.

We review your current deal

We check when your current deal expires, calculate any early repayment charges, and confirm the remaining balance, equity level, and current lender's product transfer options. This gives us the baseline for a genuine market comparison.

We search and recommend

We compare remortgage products across a broad panel of lenders, including those available only through advisers, and calculate the true cost of switching versus staying. We present the option that saves you the most over the full term, not just the initial rate period.

We manage the switch

We handle the remortgage application, instruct solicitors where necessary, and coordinate completion to coincide precisely with the end of your current deal so you never spend a single unnecessary month on an expensive standard variable rate.

“We were self-employed with a complicated situation and had already been rejected by two lenders. Vsure found us a competitive deal within a week of our first call. They managed the whole application, chased the lender when things stalled, and kept us informed throughout. Could not recommend them more highly.”
James & Rachel M. Self-employed buyers, West Yorkshire

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Common Questions

Frequently asked questions

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When is the best time to remortgage?

The best time to start the process is six months before your current deal expires. This gives you time to review the market, apply without pressure, and have the new deal ready to activate the moment your existing rate ends. We set a reminder and contact you proactively when the time is right.

Can I remortgage early to get a better rate?

Yes, but you will usually face an early repayment charge if you switch before the end of your current deal. We calculate whether the saving on the new rate over the remaining term outweighs the ERC cost. In some cases, switching early is clearly worthwhile. In others, waiting makes more sense. We give you the numbers.

Can I release equity when I remortgage?

Yes. If your property has increased in value or you have paid down a significant portion of the original loan, you may be able to borrow additional funds at the same time as remortgaging. The additional borrowing is assessed for affordability and must meet the lender's purpose criteria. Common uses include home improvements, debt consolidation, and helping a family member with a deposit.

Can I remortgage if I am self-employed?

Yes. Lenders assess self-employed applicants using two to three years of SA302 tax calculations and corresponding tax year overviews from HMRC. Some specialist lenders will consider just one year of accounts or use an accountant's certificate. We identify the most suitable lenders for your income structure before submitting anything.

Is a product transfer the same as remortgaging?

A product transfer means switching to a new deal with your existing lender without involving solicitors or a full new mortgage. It is quicker and simpler but is only compared against your current lender's products. We always compare the product transfer rate against the full market to confirm whether staying or switching is genuinely better value.

What does remortgaging cost?

Costs vary. Some deals have arrangement fees of £999 or more, while others are fee-free with a slightly higher rate. There may be valuation fees and, for a full remortgage (not a product transfer), legal fees. We calculate the total cost of each option including fees so you can compare them on a like-for-like basis.

Have a question we have not answered? Get in touch and we will respond the same working day.

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Vsure Financial is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. We are proud members of The Openwork Partnership, one of the UK's largest financial advice networks, giving our clients access to a broad panel of lenders and protection providers that most advisers cannot match. Our advisers hold the Certificate in Mortgage Advice and Practice (CeMAP) and commit to ongoing professional development. We are whole-of-market where permitted, meaning every recommendation is based solely on what is right for you, never on any commercial arrangement with a lender or insurer.

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YOUR HOME MAY BE REPOSSESSED IF YOU DO NOT KEEP UP REPAYMENTS ON YOUR MORTGAGE.    VSure Financial Ltd is an appointed representative of The Openwork Partnership, a trading style of Openwork Limited which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Approved by The Openwork Partnership on 01/02/2025.

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