When investing beats mortgage overpayments — 6.5% (Break-even rate)

When investing beats mortgage overpayments

mortgages Apr 27, 2026

Verdict

With £20,000 at 7.0% return vs 4.5% mortgage, investing produces £8,051 profit vs £4,500 interest saving.

Confidence: Medium

Break point: Investing wins as long as returns stay above 4.5% over 5 years.


The rate decision

Bar chart: pay down saves £4,500 vs invest profit £8,051
£20,000 lump sum: interest saved vs investment profit over 5 years (illustrative)
A lump sum on the mortgage gives a guaranteed return equal to your rate — investing only wins if returns consistently clear that hurdle.

Investing £20,000 at a 7.0% return yields a profit of £8,051, significantly outperforming the £4,500 saved from a 4.5% mortgage interest payment. The 2.5 percentage point gap between the expected return and the mortgage rate establishes a clear financial advantage for investing over paying down the mortgage. This differential underscores the opportunity cost of capital; by choosing to invest rather than pay off the mortgage, you maximize your returns and leverage the lower cost of borrowing. Therefore, the decision to invest is unequivocally superior in this scenario.

The return backdrop

Bar chart: interest saved £4,500 vs invest profit £8,051
£20,000 lump sum: interest saved vs investment profit over 5 years (illustrative)
Over a short horizon the certain interest saving wins; over a long horizon compounding can overcome the mortgage rate.

With UK mortgage rates at 4.5%, the decision to allocate funds becomes critical, as the guaranteed return from paying down the mortgage is significantly less attractive compared to potential investment gains. By investing £20,000 at a 7.0% return, the investor stands to earn £8,051, far exceeding the £4,500 saved from paying off the mortgage early. This stark contrast highlights the opportunity cost of not investing, as the higher rate of return on investments makes it increasingly difficult to justify the certainty of mortgage repayment in a low-rate environment. Consequently, the financial landscape favors investment over debt reduction, maximizing overall profitability.

Worked example

Assumptions (illustrative): £20,000 lump sum · 4.5% mortgage rate · 7.0% assumed return · 5-year horizon

OptionValue after 5 yearsGain above lump sum
Pay down mortgage£4,500 saved£4,500 (certain)
Invest lump sum£28,051£8,051 (at 7.0%)

Over 5 years, investing produces £3,551 more. The investment figure assumes 7.0% p.a. — not guaranteed.


When this flips

This flips only when investment returns consistently exceed 6.5% over at least 5 years. Below this threshold, the certain interest saving wins.


What to do next

Your situationActionWhy
Return beats mortgage rateInvest the lump sum7% expected return outpaces 4.5% guaranteed saving over 5 years
Mortgage rate above returnPay down mortgageGuaranteed interest saving beats uncertain market return
Rates and returns within 1%Split 50/50Reduces regret risk when the margin is too close to call
Short horizon under 3 yearsPay down mortgageToo little time for compounding to overcome mortgage interest


Sources and provenance

  • boe_mpr_2026_02.pdf

Data as of: 2026-04-27

This article contains affiliate links. We may earn a commission if you click through and take out a product. This does not affect our editorial independence or the analysis presented.