Mortgage Types UK 2026 — Fixed, Tracker, Offset, Interest-Only Explained

Offset Mortgage vs Overpaying — Which Is Better?

Comparing offset mortgages with regular overpayments. How each works, the pros and cons, and which strategy saves you more money.

Mortgage information is general guidance only. Mortgages are regulated by the FCA. YOUR HOME MAY BE REPOSSESSED IF YOU DO NOT KEEP UP REPAYMENTS ON YOUR MORTGAGE. Consult an FCA-regulated mortgage adviser before making decisions.

Both strategies reduce your mortgage interest, but they work differently.

For the wider cluster covering fixed, tracker, offset, interest-only and guarantor routes, use the main Mortgage Types UK hub.

How Each Works

Overpaying

What HappensDetails
Extra paymentGoes to mortgage balance
Balance reducesPermanently
Interest chargedOn lower balance
MoneyNo longer accessible

Offset Mortgage

What HappensDetails
Savings linkedTo mortgage account
Interest chargedOn (mortgage - savings)
Savings stayIn your account
MoneyRemains accessible

Example Comparison

The Scenario

DetailsAmount
Mortgage£200,000
Rate4.5%
Term25 years
Available savings£30,000

Overpaying: Lump Sum

ActionResult
Pay £30,000 off mortgageBalance now £170,000
Interest charged on£170,000
Monthly paymentReduces (or term shortens)
£30,000Gone from your access

Offset: Same Amount

ActionResult
£30,000 in offset accountStill yours
Interest charged on£170,000 effectively
Monthly paymentSame (but more goes to capital)
£30,000Accessible anytime

Interest Savings Comparison

Over Full TermOverpayingOffset
Interest saved~£45,000~£45,000
Money accessibleNoYes
FlexibilityLowHigh

*Assuming savings maintained throughout

Key Differences

Feature Comparison

FeatureOverpayingOffset
Interest savingYesYes
Money accessibilityNoYes
Mortgage rateStandardOften higher
Product availabilityMost mortgagesFewer options
Tax efficiencyN/ACan be better

Rate Difference Impact

ScenarioImpact
Standard mortgage at 4.0%Overpay saves interest
Offset mortgage at 4.5%Higher rate eats into benefit
Need significant savingsTo overcome rate difference

When Overpaying Wins

Better Choice If

SituationWhy
No/small savingsOffset gives no benefit
DisciplinedWon’t need money back
Lower rate non-offsetSaves more overall
Want fastest payoffDirect reduction
ERC-free mortgageCan overpay freely

Overpaying Benefits

BenefitDetails
Lower rates availableMore product choice
Definite reductionCan’t spend it
PsychologicalMortgage shrinking visibly
Term reductionMortgage-free sooner

Typical Overpayment Limits

Lender RuleCommon Limit
Annual overpayment10% of balance
No fee within limitUsually
Above limitEarly repayment charge

When Offset Wins

Better Choice If

SituationWhy
Large savingsSignificant interest offset
Self-employedVariable income, need buffer
Higher rate taxpayerSavings interest would be taxed
Uncertain futureMay need money
Large bonus potentialPark there, decide later

Offset Benefits

BenefitDetails
FlexibilityAccess savings anytime
Tax efficiencyNo interest to pay tax on
Safety netEmergency fund accessible
Effective rateOn savings = mortgage rate

Tax Efficiency Example

Higher Rate TaxpayerComparison
Savings account at 4%After tax: 2.4%
Offset at 4.5%Effective: 4.5% (no tax)
Offset winsBy 2.1% effective

Self-Employed Benefit

SituationOffset Advantage
Tax bill dueMoney accessible
Quiet monthDip in, repay later
Good yearAdd more to offset
FlexibilityEssential for variable income

Cost Comparison

Rate Premium

Mortgage TypeTypical Rate
Standard fixed4.0%
Offset equivalent4.3-4.5%
Premium0.3-0.5%

Break-Even Calculation

QuestionCalculate
Rate premium0.4%
On £200,000£800/year extra
Need savings of£17,778+ to break even
(£800 ÷ 4.5% rate)

Worth It If

Savings LevelOffset Benefit
£10,000Probably not
£20,000Borderline
£30,000+Likely worthwhile
£50,000+Definitely worth considering

Hybrid Approach

Using Both Strategies

StrategyHow
Offset for emergency fundKeep £10-20k accessible
Overpay with excessMoney you’re sure about
Review annuallyMove offset to overpayment

Example Hybrid

MoneyApproach
First £15,000In offset (emergency fund)
Next £10,000Consider overpaying
Bonus receivedOffset first, then decide

Considerations

Before Overpaying

CheckWhy
Overpayment limitsAvoid ERCs
Better debt firstClear high-interest
Emergency fundDon’t empty it
Pension contributionsEmployer match?

Before Offset

CheckWhy
Rate comparisonPremium worth it?
Savings levelEnough to benefit?
DisciplineWon’t spend savings?
Alternative ratesBetter savings account?

Decision Framework

Quick Decision

Your SituationBest Option
Small savings (<£10k)Overpay
Large savings (>£30k)Consider offset
Higher rate taxpayerOffset likely better
Self-employedOffset gives flexibility
Want mortgage gone fastOverpay
Need access to moneyOffset

Calculate Your Benefit

For OverpayingCalculate
Amount to overpay£
× Mortgage rate%
= Annual interest saved£
For OffsetCalculate
Savings to offset£
× (Mortgage rate - rate premium)%
Compare toSavings account after tax

Summary

FactorOverpayingOffset
Best rates
Flexibility
Tax efficiency✓ (higher earners)
Simplicity
Need large savings
Forces discipline
Your PriorityChoose
Fastest payoffOverpay
Keep options openOffset
Best value (small savings)Overpay
Best value (large savings + higher rate)Offset

aliases:

  • /mortgages/mortgage-types/offset-mortgage-vs-overpaying/

Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. PocketWise provides information and guidance — we do not offer financial advice. Seek independent mortgage advice before making decisions about borrowing.

You Might Also Find Useful

Sources

  1. MoneyHelper — Types of mortgage