Wednesday, September 10, 2025
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Interest Rates Cut to Lowest Level in 2 Years

Interest Rates Cut to Lowest Level in More than Two Years

he Bank of England has cut interest rates to 4%, taking the cost of borrowing to the lowest level for more than two years. The cut, from the previous rate of 4.25%, is the fifth since August last year, but was only narrowly backed by the Bank’s policymakers who took two votes to reach a decision.

Interest Rates

Lower rates will reduce monthly mortgage costs for some homeowners but it could also mean smaller returns for savers.

The unprecedented second vote by policymakers suggests further interest rate cuts will be finely balanced amid concerns over rising prices, although the Bank’s governor told the BBC the path for rates continues to be “downwards”.

Inflation is now expected to peak at 4% in September, the Bank said in its Monetary Policy Report, external. That is twice the Bank’s target rate and above the 3.8% rate it predicted in its May report.

However, while inflation is higher than the Bank would like – which would not normally lead to a rate cut – the economy has been struggling to grow and there are fears about the jobs market.

Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank of England, said the decision to cut interest rates was “finely balanced”.

“Interest rates are still on a downward path,” he said. “But any future rate cuts will need to be made gradually and carefully.”

Speaking to the BBC he said the course of future rate cuts “is a bit more uncertain frankly”.

Businesses told the Bank that “material increases” in National Insurance Contributions and the national living wage since April have added up to 2% to food prices.

The Bank said global adverse weather conditions had also lifted the cost of goods such as beef, coffee beans and cocoa.

But companies told the Bank that they expected UK labour costs “to continue to push up food prices in the second half of the year”, and in order to mitigate costs, they were having to cut staff.

They also reported shoppers were “trading down” by purchasing own-label items as opposed to branded products, and buying “cheaper cuts of meat”.

Mr Bailey told the BBC the Bank did not expect higher inflation to persist, “but we have to watch this very carefully”.

On the other hand, UK employment is “softening” he said, with data showing job vacancies are continuing to fall and wage growth is slowing.

Mr Bailey said he is “very conscious” that inflation affects the cost of living.

“Food is a particularly important issue here because for those on the lowest incomes, food [is] a larger share of their consumption because it is the essential of life so we have to be very focused on this,” he said.

At 4%, interest rates are now at their lowest level since March 2023. This will boost some mortgage-holders and borrowers, but it is likely to mean smaller returns for savers.

People with tracker mortgages, which are loans that track the Bank’s base rate, should see an immediate reduction in monthly repayments. There about 600,000 people who have one.

The latest cut in rates means repayments on an average standard variable rate mortgage of £250,000 over 25 years will fall by £40 per month, according to financial information company Moneyfacts.

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