Mortgage Rates
Weekly mortgage rate tracker: 84 tracked changes across 3 lenders
RateWatch's weekly mortgage rate tracker wrap for Friday 15 May 2026, covering remortgage, new purchase and first-time buyer rate changes across current mortgage rates UK data.
Weekly mortgage rate wrap
This weekly RateWatch wrap covers tracked lender changes across remortgage, new purchase and first-time buyer mortgage rates over the last seven days.
It is written from the same mortgage rate tracker data that powers RateWatch's comparison pages, so readers can move from the editorial summary to current mortgage rates UK-wide without losing the lender, LTV and product context.
The headline movements
Remortgage
- Santander Remortgage 60% LTV: tracker moved from 4.85% to 4.50% (-35bps, 2026-05-11)
- Santander Remortgage 75% LTV: tracker moved from 5.04% to 4.69% (-35bps, 2026-05-11)
- Nationwide Remortgage 60% LTV: 5-year fixed moved from 4.73% to 4.49% (-24bps, 2026-05-12)
- Nationwide Remortgage 60% LTV: 5-year fixed moved from 4.85% to 4.63% (-22bps, 2026-05-12)
- Nationwide Remortgage 75% LTV: 5-year fixed moved from 4.78% to 4.59% (-19bps, 2026-05-12)
- Santander Remortgage 90% LTV: 2-year fixed moved from 5.89% to 5.70% (-19bps, 2026-05-11)
New purchase
- Santander New Purchase 95% LTV: tracker moved from 5.79% to 5.29% (-50bps, 2026-05-11)
- Santander New Purchase 60% LTV: tracker moved from 4.75% to 4.35% (-40bps, 2026-05-11)
- Santander New Purchase 75% LTV: tracker moved from 4.86% to 4.46% (-40bps, 2026-05-11)
- Santander New Purchase 90% LTV: tracker moved from 5.39% to 5.05% (-34bps, 2026-05-11)
- Nationwide Home Mover 60% LTV: 5-year fixed moved from 4.73% to 4.49% (-24bps, 2026-05-12)
- Nationwide Existing Borrowers Home Mover 60% LTV: 5-year fixed moved from 4.78% to 4.54% (-24bps, 2026-05-12)
First-time buyer
- Nationwide First Time Buyers 90% LTV: 5-year fixed moved from 5.25% to 4.89% (-36bps, 2026-05-12)
- Nationwide First Time Buyers 90% LTV: 5-year fixed moved from 5.43% to 5.09% (-34bps, 2026-05-12)
- Santander First Time Buyer 90% LTV: tracker moved from 5.39% to 5.05% (-34bps, 2026-05-11)
- Nationwide First Time Buyers 95% LTV: 5-year fixed moved from 5.63% to 5.30% (-33bps, 2026-05-12)
- Nationwide First Time Buyers 80% LTV: 5-year fixed moved from 5.16% to 4.84% (-32bps, 2026-05-12)
- Nationwide First Time Buyers 95% LTV: 5-year fixed moved from 5.65% to 5.34% (-31bps, 2026-05-12)
Current 75% LTV snapshot
- Remortgage: Nationwide 2-year fixed at 4.59% (£999 fee, 75% LTV).
- New purchase: HSBC 2-year fixed at 4.59% (£999 fee, 75% LTV).
- First-time buyer: Halifax 2-year fixed at 4.64% (£999 fee, 75% LTV).
How to check mortgage rates daily
For a weekly view, start with the lenders that changed rates, then check whether the new prices are competitive against similar borrower types and LTV bands. For daily monitoring, use the RateWatch mortgage interest rates tracker and compare lender update dates before relying on a rate that may have moved.
What this means
The key thing is not only whether an individual lender has cut or increased a rate, but where the new price sits against similar products. RateWatch compares the latest lender data by product type, LTV and fee tier so brokers and borrowers can see whether a movement is genuinely competitive.
This article is a factual market update, not mortgage advice. Always check product criteria, fees and affordability before relying on a headline rate.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the weekly mortgage rate wrap cover?
It summarises tracked mortgage rate movements across remortgage, new purchase and first-time buyer products from the last seven days.
How often is the weekly wrap published?
The weekly wrap is scheduled for 2pm every Friday UK time.
Are instant rate-change posts separate from the weekly wrap?
Yes. Instant posts cover a single lender update as soon as it is detected, while the weekly wrap summarises the wider week.
What is the mortgage rate today?
There is no single UK mortgage rate today. The useful answer depends on lender, LTV, borrower type, product term and fee tier, which is why RateWatch tracks current mortgage rates by row.