The average mortgage rate for a five-year fixed deal has risen to 6.01%, according to a financial information company.
Meanwhile, the average two-year fixed rate mortgage has increased to 6.47%, Moneyfacts said.
The previous average for a five-year rate was 5.97% on Monday, while the two-year deal was 6.42%.
A five-year fixed deal is at a high not seen since 21 November – as the market reeled from Liz Truss government’s botched mini budget.
Cost of living latest: ‘Snowballing’ driving up mortgage prices’
Flourish
This content is provided by Flourish, which may be using cookies and other technologies.
To show you this content, we need your permission to use cookies.
You can use the buttons below to amend your preferences to enable Flourish cookies or to allow those cookies just once.
You can change your settings at any time via the Privacy Options.
Unfortunately we have been unable to verify if you have consented to Flourish cookies.
To view this content you can use the button below to allow Flourish cookies for this session only.
The average rate for a two-year fix went over 6% about two weeks ago.
The majority of mortgage holders are on fixed rate deals, 2.4 million of which will expire from now to the end of 2024, UK Finance, the banking industry trade body has said.
Mortgage rates have been rising significantly since May when inflation data showed the rate of price rises was not coming down as quickly as expected.
That led markets to expect the Bank of England would raise the base rate interest rate higher than previously thought, in its efforts to bring inflation down to 2%.
Lenders priced the expected rise in to the mortgages they had on the market, meaning people are being offered higher mortgage rates when their existing fixed rate mortgage ends.
The current Bank of England base interest rate was hiked to a shock 5% last month in the wake of the stubbornly high inflation data.
Another hike, bringing the rate to 5.5%, is forecast to come on 3 August, when the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee meets.
The monetary policy maker has been progressively raising interest rates – making borrowing more expensive – to dampen economic activity and slow down the rate of price rises.
The consumer price index measure of inflation stood at 8.7% in the year up to May.