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Major high street banks hike mortgage rates from TODAY – see the full list and how you can get the best deal

The last sub-4% mortgage rates have been pulled as the price war cools

ANOTHER three lenders have hiked their mortgage rates in a bitter blow to first-time buyers and those needing to remortgage.

HSBC, NatWest and Virgin Money pulled various deals overnight and upped their fixed rates this morning.

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Lenders are hiking their fixed mortgage ratesCredit: Getty

It is the latest wave of lenders pulling cheaper deals only to come back with higher rates.

It means there will no longer be any five-year fixed mortgage deals on offer with rates below 4%.

It comes after Santander, Coventry Building Society and TSB all raised rates on new fixed deals earlier in the week.

The lowest five-year fix for buyers and those remortgaging is now offered by First Direct at 4.04%.

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Across all deposit sizes, the average two-year fixed homeowner mortgage rate on the market hit 5.70% on Tuesday, according to Moneyfacts.

And the average five-year fixed homeowner mortgage rate was 5.28% on Tuesday.

Why are lenders upping mortgage rates?

David Hollingworth, associate director at L&C Mortgages said: "There has been a large amount of pricing activity with lenders shifting rates regularly to adjust to the fact that markets now anticipate that base rate may take longer to fall than had previously been hoped."

Decision-makers on the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted to keep interest rates at 5.25% for the fourth consecutive time at the beginning of February.

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At the beginning of the year, markets forecasted four rate cuts in 2024, which would have taken the Bank's rate to 3.75% by Christmas.

However, investors are now expecting the first rate cuts to begin in September.

David added: "This has forced fixed rates back up as funding costs have risen leading to HSBC being the last lender standing in the sub 4% bracket.

"That may catch some borrowers by surprise when the rate story this year has generally been one of falling rates."

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How do higher mortgage rates affect my payments?

HIGHER mortgage rates make monthly repayments higher.

Over two years ago, you could get a two-year fixed rate mortgage for 0.99%.

On a £100,000 mortgage taken over 25 years, this would have meant monthly repayments of £376.

If you were to borrow £100,000 over the same term today at the average two-year fixed rate of 5.28%, your monthly repayments would be £601.

That's an extra £225 a month and it's forcing borrowers to take longer deals.

What does it mean for mortgage holders?

Lenders are primarily upping their fixed mortgage deals instead of their standard variable and tracker deals right now.

Around 1.6million households are currently on fixed mortgage deals, which later expire this year.

This means that over a million households face the prospect of increasing monthly payments by hundreds of pounds.

And 420,000 of these households will see their fixed deal expire between March and May.

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How to get the best deal on your mortgage

If you're looking for a traditional type of mortgage, getting the best rates depends entirely on what's available at any given time.

But there are several ways to land the best deal.

Usually the larger the deposit you have the lower the rate you can get.

If you're remortgaging and your loan-to-value ratio (LTV) has changed, you'll get access to better rates than before.

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