Halifax mortgages
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Halifax's range of mortgages and remortgages covers those looking to buy a home or switch from a different lender.
The lender also offers deals for existing customers coming to the end of a fixed-rate or discount deal with offset mortgages through Intelligent Finance, buy-to-let mortgages through Birmingham Midshires and Spanish property mortgages through Banco Halifax Hispania.
See below for more details of mortgage deals:
- Halifax cuts mortgage rates
- Halifax launch cashback offer on current accounts
- Halifax reveals updated mortgages
- Halifax cuts mortgage rates on 2-year deals
- Halifax extend £100 current account switching incentive
Mortgages News
Halifax HPI: House prices up 5.4% in last 12 monthsThe Halifax house price index for August shows that prices have gone up by 5.4 per cent over the 12 months to the end of July. |
Mortgages prop up Funding for LendingFunding for Lending is being driven forward by an increase in mortgage lending, the Bank of England has said. |
Carney "ready" to stop housing bubbleNew Bank of England governor Mark Carney says he is "personally" ready to see off the dangers of a housing bubble. |
House prices continue upward climbHouse prices rose by one per cent between June and July, according to the latest data from the Land Registry. |
Mortgage lending on course for best year since 2008The Council of Mortgage Lenders reports that gross mortgage lending went up by 29% on July to reach the highest level since October 2008. |
Asking prices up by 5.5% in one yearThe latest House Price Index from Rightmove reveals that despite a small drop in August, asking prices for properties have gone up by 5.5 per cent in the last 12 months. |
Mortgages cheapest since 1999 but rates could be on the riseThe cots of a mortgage is at its most affordable since 1999 with the proportion of income spent on them by an average household down to 27 per cent, according to new research by the Halifax. |
Weale objects to early inflation risk on forward guidanceThe Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee voted unanimously to keep interest rates at 0.50% and QE at £375bn but Martin Weale voted against adopting forward guidance on interest rates citing inflation risks. |
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