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1million Brits warned they’re ‘gambling’ on mortgages that run beyond retirement

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Around a million young Brits are risking their future golden years by signing up for mortgages that extend beyond the state pension age, according to a former pensions minister.

Sir Steve Webb, now a partner at LCP (Lane Clark & Peacock) and ex-Liberal Democrat MP who served during the Coalition Government, has raised the alarm over the “shocking” tally of mortgage agreements that don’t wrap up until after the state pension kicks in.




New data obtained through a Freedom of Information request from the Bank of England reveals that 42% of new mortgages in the final quarter of 2023 were set to continue past the state pension age.

Read more: HMRC message to millions

Comparatively, in the same timeframe, 38% of fresh mortgage arrangements were scheduled to conclude after the age of 66, with this figure standing at 32% in the fourth quarter of 2021. Sir Webb points out that based on these stats, over the past three years, one million new mortgages have been granted with end dates that overshoot the state pension age.

He commented: “The challenge of getting on the housing ladder is forcing large numbers of young home buyers to gamble with their retirement prospects by taking on ultra-long mortgages.”

“We already know that millions of people are not saving enough for their retirement and if some of that limited retirement saving has to be used to clear a mortgage balance at retirement they will be at even greater risk of poverty in old age.”

During Q4 of 2023, the group of homebuyers aged between 30 and 39 took out 30,943 new mortgages that would last beyond the state pension age, while those aged 40 to 49 secured 32,305 such deals.

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