Brendan Burgess
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While I wrote the original post on this, Paul F has edited it and made it far easier to read and has kept it updated. Brendan
You (or your broker) should apply to two or three of the cheapest lenders simultaneously. It might take some time for your loan offer to materialise, and today's Best Buy may no longer be the Best Buy when you draw it down.
If you want the cheapest mortgage, look at the interest rate – not at the repayments. A lender can make the repayments lower by extending the term. (The APR or APRC is of little relevance when looking at fixed rates – look at the headline interest rate instead.)
Note: LTV means "loan-to-value ratio". For example, if you are borrowing €300k and the property is worth €400k, your LTV is 300k/400k = 75%
– and so you fall into the "60% to 80% LTV bracket" (sometimes written as "≤80% LTV").
Calculate your LTV and then look at the relevant table. If you are uncertain about which LTV bracket you will end up in, you will need to look at two of the tables. This can happen when you have not gone sale agreed on a house yet, or when you are switching lender/re-fixing with your current lender and you don't have an updated valuation for your house yet.
Selected rates for a loan-to-value (LTV) ratio between 60% and 80%
Note that Avant's rates are slightly lower than the ones shown in this table if your LTV is 70% or less
Dates of the most-recent interest rate increases:
Because rate increases across the various lenders are so frequent at the moment, you (or your broker) should apply to several lenders at the same time. Get approval in principle (AIP) from as many of them as you can, and do as many of the subsequent steps as you can before you have to tell your solicitor which lender to try to get full approval (a letter of offer) from.
Notes on the above tables:
Think carefully before choosing Bank of Ireland, permanent tsb or EBS, as their rates have usually been much higher than the other lenders over the last several years. Some of their rates and/or cashback offers may make them appealing. But before you commit to one of these lenders, ask yourself if you will be willing and able to switch to another lender in a few years' time. If you don't/can't switch, you will be stuck with their high rates when your initial fixed rate ends (in the case of BOI their lowest rates are not available to existing customers), and those higher rates will cost you dearly over the long term.
See this post for a list of reasons why you might not be able to switch in the future. E.g., your income might have reduced significantly because you or your partner has given up work to look after the kids.
If you already have a mortgage, consider posting your mortgage details in the switcher thread (in the format shown in the first post) – even if you are in the middle of a fixed rate. You will get an estimate of the savings you would make from switching to other lenders (or from re-fixing with your current lender). Even if your mortgage is with Ulster Bank, you can still re-fix with them. Re-fixing with your current lender is much simpler and quicker than switching to another lender.
If you are self-employed or if you have a bad credit record, then you may find that Bank of Ireland will give you a mortgage where other lenders won't. Check out this thread. Finance Ireland is another option, as they have a "Progress Plus" mortgage, which has higher rates for higher-risk customers.
You (or your broker) should apply to two or three of the cheapest lenders simultaneously. It might take some time for your loan offer to materialise, and today's Best Buy may no longer be the Best Buy when you draw it down.
If you want the cheapest mortgage, look at the interest rate – not at the repayments. A lender can make the repayments lower by extending the term. (The APR or APRC is of little relevance when looking at fixed rates – look at the headline interest rate instead.)
Note: LTV means "loan-to-value ratio". For example, if you are borrowing €300k and the property is worth €400k, your LTV is 300k/400k = 75%
– and so you fall into the "60% to 80% LTV bracket" (sometimes written as "≤80% LTV").
Calculate your LTV and then look at the relevant table. If you are uncertain about which LTV bracket you will end up in, you will need to look at two of the tables. This can happen when you have not gone sale agreed on a house yet, or when you are switching lender/re-fixing with your current lender and you don't have an updated valuation for your house yet.
Selected rates for a loan-to-value (LTV) ratio between 80% and 90%
Haven increased their variable rates on 18th May 2023 - the tables have not yet been updated to reflect them.
Haven increased their variable rates on 18th May 2023 - the tables have not yet been updated to reflect them.
Selected rates for a loan-to-value (LTV) ratio between 60% and 80%
Note that Avant's rates are slightly lower than the ones shown in this table if your LTV is 70% or less
Selected rates for a loan-to-value (LTV) ratio of 60% or less
Note that AIB's rates are slightly lower than the ones shown in this table if your LTV is 50% or less
Note that AIB's rates are slightly lower than the ones shown in this table if your LTV is 50% or less
Dates of the most-recent interest rate increases:
- Bank of Ireland: 31st March 2023, 24th January 2023 and 10th November 2022
- The rates in the above tables marked "current BOI mtg customers only" are only available if you are looking to fix/re-fix your existing BOI mortgage – they are not available to home movers
- Finance Ireland: 16th March 2023, 3rd October 2022 and 14th June 2022
- EBS: 15th March 2023, 25th November 2022 and 14th October 2022
- AIB: 14th March 2023 (variable rates)
- Permanent TSB: 8th March 2023, 13th January 2023 and 18th November 2022
- Ulster Bank: 24th February 2023 and 24th November 2022
- AIB and Haven: 2nd February 2023 (fixed rates), 25th November 2022 and 14th October 2022
- Avant: 8th December 2022, 15th August 2022 and 16th May 2022
Because rate increases across the various lenders are so frequent at the moment, you (or your broker) should apply to several lenders at the same time. Get approval in principle (AIP) from as many of them as you can, and do as many of the subsequent steps as you can before you have to tell your solicitor which lender to try to get full approval (a letter of offer) from.
Notes on the above tables:
- The rates are available to first-time buyers, movers and switchers
- Unless otherwise noted, they are also available to existing customers of a given lender – in other words, if you are on a particular rate with your current lender and you qualify for one of their lower rates (or a longer fixed-rate period), you can apply for it. And that process is much simpler and quicker than switching to another lender.
- "green" means that you are only eligible for this rate if the property has a Building Energy Rating (BER) of B3 or better
- Check it here or consider getting a BER assessment done (see this post) if you are switching your mortgage to another lender (or if you are re-fixing with your current lender)
- If you are a first-time buyer or moving home and you are hoping to get a green rate, it is important to confirm that the property you are thinking of buying really does have a BER of B3 or better (with an unexpired BER cert to prove it)
- In the case of Ulster Bank's green rate, the BER must be B2 or better (not just B3 or better)
- "≥€250k" means that you are only eligible for this rate if your mortgage balance is at least €250k
- AIB may approve you for a mortgage topup if you apply for one, and if the topped-up mortgage balance is €250k or higher, you will be eligible for the lower interest rate (see here, under the "Check our rates" section). This is true regardless of whether you are an existing AIB mortgage customer or you are switching your mortgage to AIB while getting a topup.
- If you were going to borrow, e.g., €245k, you could consider borrowing €250k in order to get this rate. But you would have to make sure that AIB would lend you €250k and that doing so would not cause you to have an LTV above 90%.
- There would be no point in taking this approach (borrowing extra) if the property definitely has a BER of B3 or better, since you would already be eligible for AIB's green 5-year fixed rate
- Fixed-rate periods of less than 4 years are not shown. With Avant you can either fix for 10 years or less or you can fix for your entire mortgage term (but not any term in between).
Think carefully before choosing Bank of Ireland, permanent tsb or EBS, as their rates have usually been much higher than the other lenders over the last several years. Some of their rates and/or cashback offers may make them appealing. But before you commit to one of these lenders, ask yourself if you will be willing and able to switch to another lender in a few years' time. If you don't/can't switch, you will be stuck with their high rates when your initial fixed rate ends (in the case of BOI their lowest rates are not available to existing customers), and those higher rates will cost you dearly over the long term.
See this post for a list of reasons why you might not be able to switch in the future. E.g., your income might have reduced significantly because you or your partner has given up work to look after the kids.
If you already have a mortgage, consider posting your mortgage details in the switcher thread (in the format shown in the first post) – even if you are in the middle of a fixed rate. You will get an estimate of the savings you would make from switching to other lenders (or from re-fixing with your current lender). Even if your mortgage is with Ulster Bank, you can still re-fix with them. Re-fixing with your current lender is much simpler and quicker than switching to another lender.
If you are self-employed or if you have a bad credit record, then you may find that Bank of Ireland will give you a mortgage where other lenders won't. Check out this thread. Finance Ireland is another option, as they have a "Progress Plus" mortgage, which has higher rates for higher-risk customers.
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