Atom Bank reduces prime mortgage rates
Rates have reduced by up to 0.15%.

Atom Bank has reduced rates across its prime mortgage range.
Two-year fixed rate prime products have been cut by up to 0.15%, while rates on three and five-year fixed rates have been trimmed by 0.10%.
As a result, rates now start at 5.19% for two-year deals, 5.14% for three-year products and 5.04% for five-year fixed rates.
This is the second rate reduction for Atom's prime range so far in 2025, while last month rates across the near prime range dropped by up to 0.20%.
Richard Harrison, head of mortgages at Atom Bank, commented: “Atom Bank is passionate about delivering simple, competitively priced mortgages for residential borrowers, even if they have had temporary credit issues in the past. This rate reduction, coming so soon after we cut our near prime rates, is a great demonstration of our commitment to supporting buyers of all kinds, including those with modest deposits.
“It’s clear that our methods are striking a chord with both borrowers and brokers. Not only are we the UK’s highest rated bank on Trustpilot, but we have also topped the bank category in the last three editions of the Mortgage Lender Benchmark from Smart Money People. The combination of market-leading speed to offer times and competitive pricing is making a tangible difference to brokers and their clients.”

Breaking news
Direct to your inbox:
More
stories
you'll love:
This week's biggest stories:
Santander
Santander to acquire TSB in £2.65bn deal

Bank Of England
Bank of England issues first-of-its-kind fine of £11.9m

Regulation
Lenders urged to prepare for court ruling on commissions as motor finance complaints surge

Financial Conduct Authority
FCA moves ahead with targeted support in 'transformational' advice reforms

This week's biggest stories:
Santander
Santander to acquire TSB in £2.65bn deal

Bank Of England
Bank of England issues first-of-its-kind fine of £11.9m

Regulation
Lenders urged to prepare for court ruling on commissions as motor finance complaints surge

Financial Conduct Authority
FCA moves ahead with targeted support in 'transformational' advice reforms

Mortgages
FCA and PRA remove 15% LTI cap for mortgage lenders

GDP
August rate cut likely as GDP falls for second consecutive month
