FCA mortgage consultation: loans could become more accessible, but affordability issues persist

Sarah Coles
9 June 2026
  • The FCA is consulting on making it easier for first-time buyers, older borrowers and the self-employed to get a mortgage 
  • It will explore how to help lenders offer flexible repayments for people with variable incomes – like the self-employed 
  • The FCA will consider rule changes to encourage lenders to look at people’s full situation – instead of automatically excluding those with past credit issues 
  • Affordability guidance for retirement interest-only mortgages could be updated   
  • The regulator will also look at giving lenders more flexibility on interest-only mortgages   

Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at AJ Bell, comments: 

“Mortgage rules are set to ease again, as the FCA considers loosening more of the restraints applied to the mortgage market after the financial crisis. It’s trying to identify the right balance between risk management and flexibility, so it opens the door for more sensible lending, without opening the floodgates to more questionable arrangements. 

“Developing products to better suit people’s lives makes perfect sense. Self-employed people with lumpy incomes have been forced to contort their finances into paying the same sums each month under existing rules. A change could allow them to access products that are flexible enough to fit around their lives and their needs instead. 

“Taking a more holistic approach to borrowers will also avoid the current situation where someone who has met all their financial responsibilities for years can be ruled out because of a small mistake they made years ago, when their life may have looked completely different. 

“But mortgages are just one part of the picture. A healthy housing market also needs enough affordable properties, plus tax rules that don’t distort buyer behaviour and put people off. The flow of first-time buyers also depends on people being able to build healthy deposits. This can be a huge challenge when they’re also having to cover the cost of sky-high rents. 

“The Lifetime ISA has helped hundreds of thousands of people onto the property ladder. If you qualify, it’s a brilliant way to get a government bonus of up to £1,000 a year for your house purchase. The government is planning to consult on an alternative to the LISA, but if you get in now, you’ll be able to keep using it indefinitely, so it could be worth getting started sooner rather than later.” 

Sarah Coles
Head of Personal Finance

Sarah Coles is head of personal finance. She’s passionate about helping people get to grips with their money, so they have more freedom to do the things that really matter to them in life. She regularly provides insight and analysis for the press, writes columns and articles and appears on TV and radio. She covers everything from savings and investments to pensions and tax. Sarah is an award winning former financial journalist, spending almost 20 years working for publications from Bloomberg to Moneywise and AOL Money. She has worked as a financial spokesperson for the past nine years, and most recently won Headline Money’s Expert of the Year award.

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