Pepper Money cuts rates by up to 0.20%
Two and three-year rates have seen the largest reductions.

Pepper Money has announced price reductions of 0.20% across its entire two and three-year product range.
In addition, cuts of 0.10% will apply across the lender's five-year range.
The rate reductions cover products for the self-employed, those with recent adverse credit, and first-time buyers.
Paul Adams, sales director at Pepper Money, said: “We’re really pleased to make further rate reductions across our specialist mortgages range. Following the recent election results and favourable movements in swaps, we’re reducing our rates again to pass this on to customers as quickly as possible.
“With rate reductions come more optimism and an increase in market activity for our broker partners and us. But as demand grows, our broker partners can be assured that transparency and efficiency remain a priority as the market gets busier.
“Pepper Money was recently named the top specialist lender and the highest-ranked lender overall in the latest Mortgage Lender Benchmark survey by Smart Money People, and we’ll continue supporting our new, lower rates with an ongoing commitment to award-winning service delivery.
“As part of this commitment, we believe that phone conversations are better than emails, and so our underwriters call a broker after they’ve submitted an application. This is part of our human approach, helping to provide greater confidence and certainty, with real people at the end of the phone looking to help. Plus, any declines are reviewed by a senior underwriter to give every application a potential second chance. These reduced rates, coupled with our award-winning service could make your next customer better with Pepper.”

Breaking news
Direct to your inbox:
More
stories
you'll love:
This week's biggest stories:
This week's biggest stories:
Lloyds
Lloyds sets aside extra £4bn for high-LTI mortgage lending

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

Government
Government confirms launch of permanent Freedom to Buy mortgage scheme

FCA
FCA fines Barclays £42m over financial crime risks
