All eyes in the UK are fixed on Thursday, 18 June 2026. That is the date the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) will announce whether the base rate stays at 3.75%, gets cut, or – in a scenario that would shock many borrowers – actually rises. With inflation sitting stubbornly above target, global energy markets in turmoil due to the conflict in the Middle East, and over 5.2 million UK households facing a rise in mortgage costs by 2028, this is not just a number on a page. It is a decision that will directly affect how much you pay on your mortgage, how much your savings earn, and how your investment portfolio performs in the months ahead.
At FinanceLiveHub, we have pulled together everything you need to know – from the hard data on where rates stand today, to expert forecasts, to practical steps you can take right now to protect and grow your money no matter which way the MPC votes.
Where Things Stand Right Now: The Base Rate at 3.75%
The Bank of England held the base rate at 3.75% at its 30 April 2026 meeting. The MPC voted 8-1 in favour of holding – but the lone dissenting vote was not for a cut. One committee member voted to raise rates to 4%. That is the first vote for a rate increase since the tightening cycle ended in summer 2023, and financial markets noticed.
To understand how we got here, it helps to rewind. The base rate peaked at 5.25% in 2023 and 2024. Through 2025, the Bank cut rates six times, bringing the base rate down from 4.75% in January 2025 to 3.75% by December 2025. For many borrowers, that was welcome relief. A typical first-time buyer on a two-year fixed deal with a 10% deposit saw their rate fall from around 5.35% in January 2025 to about 4.49% by the end of that year.
But 2026 has thrown a curveball. The war in the Middle East disrupted global oil and gas supply chains. UK inflation, which had been expected to reach the 2% target in spring 2026, instead rose to 3.3% as of March 2026. CPI did ease back to 2.8% in April, but the Bank of England is already warning it could climb again over the summer as higher energy costs fully feed through to the economy. That is the uncomfortable backdrop for the June 18 decision.
What Analysts Are Predicting for June 18
The honest answer is: nobody is certain. And that itself tells you something important.
In a Reuters poll of economists, 33 expected the base rate to remain unchanged in 2026, 14 expected at least one hike, and 15 predicted one or more cuts. The range of outcomes is unusually wide, and that reflects genuine uncertainty about where inflation goes from here.
Here is where the major institutions stand heading into June 18:
- JP Morgan predicts the base rate will be increased once this year, with June as the likely moment.
- ING expects a “one-and-done” hike, describing it as a move driven by political turmoil pushing up UK borrowing costs.
- Oxford Economics believes the Bank will hold rates at their current level for the rest of 2026 and well into 2027.
- The National Institute of Economic and Social Research warns that if energy cost increases persist for a full year, rates could climb to 4.5%.
- The Institute for Fiscal Studies says a rise above 4% cannot be ruled out.
- Natixis notes that if the Middle East conflict continues fuelling inflation while slowing growth, the Bank may ultimately keep rates unchanged for the rest of the year.
- Tembo Money expects the base rate to hold flat at the June meeting, since the MPC is still balancing above-target inflation against weak growth and energy uncertainty.
The May CPI inflation figure will be released on 17 June – the day before the MPC announcement. That single number could move markets significantly and shift the probability of a hold versus a hike right at the last minute. If you are watching anything in the lead-up to June 18, watch the 17 June inflation data release.
What This Means for Your Mortgage
This is where the June 18 decision hits closest to home for millions of people.
According to the Bank of England’s Financial Stability Committee report from April 2026, around 5.2 million UK households now face increases in their mortgage costs by the end of 2028. That figure was 3.9 million before the Middle East conflict began. The Bank says the scale of increases will “remain modest” compared with the post-mini-budget shock of 2022, but modest is relative when your monthly payment goes up by hundreds of pounds.
Mortgage approvals for house purchases rose to 65,900 in April 2026, up from 64,000 in March – a figure that sits above the previous six-month average of around 63,100. Buyer demand is holding up. But borrowers are still paying mortgage costs roughly £1,000 per year higher than they were last summer.
Tracker and Standard Variable Rate Mortgages
If you are on a tracker mortgage, your rate moves directly in line with the base rate. A 25 basis point rise on June 18 would immediately add to your monthly payments. Standard variable rate mortgages also tend to follow the base rate, though lenders have some discretion. If you are on either of these, it is worth modelling now what a 0.25% or 0.50% rise would cost you monthly and whether switching to a fixed deal before June 18 makes sense.
Fixed Rate Mortgages
Fixed rate mortgages are priced mainly off swap rates – market expectations for where rates will be over the next two to five years – rather than the current base rate directly. This means fixed rates can move before any MPC decision, and some of the expected rate movements from June 18 may already be priced into lender products. That said, a surprise hike could still push fixed rates higher in the weeks following the decision.
Remortgaging Soon?
If your fixed deal ends in the next six months, consider starting the remortgage process now rather than waiting for the June decision. Many lenders allow you to lock in a rate up to six months ahead. If rates rise in June, you will be protected. If rates fall or hold, most lenders allow you to switch to a better deal before completion. Waiting and seeing sounds prudent – but in practice it often costs more.
What This Means for Savers
A potential base rate rise sounds bad for borrowers, but savers face the opposite challenge. They have been watching rates on easy-access accounts and cash ISAs gradually decline since late 2024 as the Bank cut rates through 2025.
If the MPC holds or raises on June 18, that could stabilise or improve savings rates in the near term. The best easy-access accounts in the UK are currently offering around 4.5% to 4.85% AER depending on the provider, and fixed-term bonds are available at higher rates for those willing to lock money away.
Key points for savers right now:
- If a rate rise is coming, fixing your savings for a shorter term (6 to 12 months) may make more sense than a long-term fix, so you can capture any future rises.
- Cash ISA allowances reset on 6 April each year. If you have not used your 2026/27 allowance yet, any interest earned inside an ISA is tax-free regardless of what rates do.
- Premium Bonds currently offer a prize fund rate equivalent of 4.40% tax-free – a reasonable option for risk-averse savers uncertain about the rate direction.
What This Means for UK Investors
The relationship between interest rate decisions and investment markets is not always straightforward, but here are the key dynamics playing out right now:
UK Equities – FTSE 100 and FTSE 250
Rate hikes generally weigh on equities, particularly growth stocks and companies with high debt loads. The FTSE 100 is heavily weighted toward commodity producers, banks, and energy companies – sectors that can actually benefit from the inflationary environment driving rate concerns. FTSE 250 companies, which are more domestically focused, tend to be more vulnerable to rate rises and a slowdown in UK consumer spending.
Gilts and Bond Funds
UK government bonds (gilts) move inversely to interest rates. If the MPC hikes on June 18, gilt prices would be expected to fall and yields to rise. Investors holding bond funds would see short-term paper losses. However, rising yields also mean new bonds issued after a hike offer better income for those buying fresh into the market.
Property Investment
Higher mortgage rates compress affordability and can slow house price growth. Oxford Economics forecasts the base rate to hold at 3.75% into 2027. Brunel University economists note that even if rates eventually fall further, fixed mortgage rates have already priced in much of that expected decline – so buyers should not wait for dramatically lower rates before making property decisions.
Dividend Stocks and Income Investing
With cash rates still competitive and the rate outlook uncertain, income investors have more genuine options than they have had in over a decade. A diversified approach – combining competitive cash savings with dividend-paying UK equities and inflation-linked assets – remains a solid strategy for navigating the current environment.
The Bigger Picture: Middle East Conflict and UK Inflation
The wildcard in all of this is the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. The Bank of England has been explicit: inflation was expected to reach 2% in spring 2026 under normal circumstances. The war disrupted oil and gas transportation and supply, pushed energy prices higher, and forced the MPC to revise its forecasts upward.
The Bank’s central projection as of the April meeting had CPI inflation at 3.1% in Q2 2026, rising to 3.3% in Q3, and potentially climbing further in Q4 before easing back toward the 2% medium-term target. The Bank said it would “do what is necessary” to keep inflation on track. That language keeps the door open to a rate rise without committing to one – and markets are paying close attention.
Practical Steps to Take Before June 18
Whatever the MPC decides, you do not have to sit and wait. Here is what informed borrowers, savers and investors are doing right now:
- Check your mortgage type today. If you are on a tracker or SVR, model what a 0.25% rise does to your monthly payment and decide whether locking into a fixed rate now is worth the certainty.
- Start your remortgage process early. If your deal ends before the end of 2026, speak to a mortgage broker now. You can secure a rate today and still switch if something better appears before completion.
- Review your savings accounts. Make sure your money is earning a competitive return and is not sitting in a default low-rate account.
- Use your ISA allowance. Tax-free savings and investments become more valuable as rates and returns rise.
- Do not try to time the market perfectly. Rate decisions are unpredictable – as the wide spread in analyst forecasts makes clear. Building a solid plan that works across a range of scenarios is more valuable than betting on one outcome.
- Stay informed. The May inflation figure released on 17 June will be the biggest single signal of what comes next on June 18.
Key Dates to Watch
- 17 June 2026 – UK May CPI inflation data released. The final major data point before the MPC decision.
- 18 June 2026 – Bank of England MPC rate decision announced. Current base rate: 3.75%.
- Remaining 2026 MPC meeting dates: August, September, November, December.
Final Word: Uncertainty Is Not an Excuse to Do Nothing
Nobody – not JP Morgan, not Oxford Economics, not the Bank of England itself – knows exactly what inflation will do over the next six months. The Middle East conflict has added a layer of genuine unpredictability that even the best models struggle to handle. But the people who will come out of this period strongest are not the ones who predicted the right outcome. They are the ones who built financial resilience – manageable debt, competitive savings returns, diversified investments – so that whichever way rates go, they are not caught off guard.
At FinanceLiveHub, we will be covering the June 18 decision live: full MPC vote breakdown, what it means for fixed mortgage rates, savings accounts, and the investment markets – as it happens.
Sources: Bank of England, HomeOwners Alliance, Raisin UK, Mortgage One Finance, Tembo Money, Brunel University London, Trading Economics, Uswitch. All rate figures as of June 2026. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute personalised financial advice. Always consult a qualified financial adviser before making decisions about your mortgage or investments.
