Leave early if the current deal still has months left
This window compares the months that remain on the current deal only. That keeps the ERC question focused on the period it actually affects.
Compare two common remortgage decisions: leaving your current deal early, or comparing the post-expiry fallback rate with a replacement deal over the same planning window.
Start Window
Many borrowers start speaking to a lender around 6 months before expiry
Fallback Risk
Many fixed deals move onto the lender's SVR if no action is taken
Cost Warning
Remortgaging can cost more than £1,000 once fees are included
Calculator
Use the leave-early tab if you are still inside the current deal and want to test whether an ERC could be worth paying. Use the after-deal tab if you are comparing a fallback rate after expiry with a replacement deal.
This drives the early-exit comparison window.
Keep this equal to the remaining term for the cleanest like-for-like comparison.
Charged by the current lender if you leave before the deal ends.
Use this tab for the "should I pay an ERC and switch before my current deal expires?" question. It compares the remaining months on your current deal only rather than projecting the whole mortgage life.
Positive means switching now reduces the monthly payment.
Positive means switching now cuts interest during the remaining current-deal window.
Positive means the payment reduction over the remaining current-deal window exceeds the upfront switching cost.
Positive means switching now leaves you owing less when your current deal would have ended.
This is a useful reference for how the case may be priced, but it is not a lender quote.
At the current monthly payment gap, it would take about 1 year 8 months to recover the upfront switching cost.
If the new term is longer than the current remaining term, a lower monthly payment can simply reflect slower repayment. That is why this planner also shows interest during the window and the balance left at the natural deal-end checkpoint.
Use Cases
These are different mortgage questions, so compare them separately.
This window compares the months that remain on the current deal only. That keeps the ERC question focused on the period it actually affects.
Many borrowers move onto their lender's SVR if they do nothing. The second tab lets you compare that fallback path with a replacement deal over a selected post-expiry window.
A remortgage can look cheaper simply because the term is being stretched. That is why this planner shows upfront switching costs, interest during the selected window and the balance left at the end.
Interpretation
These are the points that most often distort a remortgage comparison.
If the replacement deal stretches the repayment period, the monthly payment may fall even if the mortgage is not cheaper in any meaningful sense. That is why the planner also shows interest during the window and the balance still owed.
Product fees, valuation costs, legal costs and any early repayment charge are kept on-page so the route does not repeat the common mistake of comparing only the rate.
For the after-deal comparison, use the rate your lender has actually shown you if you have it. Do not fill that gap with a guessed market average.
Tracking
Timing is often the biggest avoidable remortgage mistake, so it helps to keep the deal end date visible.
Store your deal end date locally in your browser and surface 6, 3 and 1 month reminders based on the date you enter.
Use the action-plan page if your deal expiry date is now the main priority.
Estimate the early repayment charge before judging whether leaving the current deal early is worth it.
Check product fees, legal costs and valuation costs separately before trusting a lower rate headline.
Compare the rate structure itself if you are still deciding between fixed and variable options.
No. It compares selected planning windows only. A remortgage decision depends on the rate, the fee, the deal length and what happens next, not on a fixed whole-term answer.
You can often start talking to your lender around six months before your current deal ends.
Many borrowers move onto their lender's standard variable rate if they take no action when the fixed period ends.
It compares the remaining months on your current deal only. It is for the question of whether paying the early repayment charge to switch before expiry could make sense on the numbers you enter.
It compares the selected post-expiry window only. Enter the rate you would fall onto if you did nothing, then compare it with a replacement deal over the same window.