Life - Articles - Health shocks leave 1 in 4 unable to pay their mortgage


One in four (28%) homeowners have fallen into financial difficulty due to illness or injury. One in five (20%) borrowers have no savings safety net at all. Nearly one in 10 (9%) regret not having protection, while others admit they assumed they were covered

Millions of UK mortgage holders are just one health shock away from missing a payment according to new research from MetLife UK. More than a quarter (28%) of homeowners have already fallen into financial difficulty resulting in them missing a mortgage payment due to illness or injury.
 
In many cases, the impact is not a one-off. One in 14 (7%) say they have missed mortgage payments multiple times after being unable to work - highlighting how quickly financial pressure can spiral.
 
The crisis is most stark among younger borrowers. Half of Gen Z mortgage holders (50%) report they have already missed payments as a result of illness or injury, pointing to a generation particularly exposed to income shocks.
 
With the typical mortgage bill now exceeding £1,000 a month, pressure on household finances is high and raises the stakes if income suddenly stops.
 
While 71% of mortgage holders say they have savings to fall back on, the reality is far less reassuring. On average, these savings would last just six months - and for many, far less. One in five (20%) have no savings at all, leaving them with no buffer from day one.
 
When the money runs out, most are forced to rely on others. A third (34%) would turn to family, and a quarter (24%) to a partner. Just 17% say they would rely on insurance, while 15% would consider taking on more debt through short-term loans. Worryingly, one in 10 (10%) say they have no one to turn to, and 8% admit they would simply miss mortgage payments.
 
The research also exposes a sense of hindsight and misunderstanding around protection. Nearly one in 10 (9%) say they regret not taking out cover after experiencing illness or loss of income, while 8% assumed they were already protected when they were not. A similar proportion (8%) admit they only think about protection once it is too late, and 6% believe they simply will not fall ill or suffer a serious accident.
 
The findings lay bare a stark reality: for many households, a single accident or illness could trigger an immediate financial crisis - yet protection is still too often overlooked until the consequences hit.
 
Phil Jeynes, Head of Individual Protection at MetLife UK, comments: “Homeowning Brits are facing a perfect storm of higher-for-longer rates, sticky inflation and economic uncertainty with ongoing geopolitical conflict and disruption to global energy markets.      
 
“When illness or injury stops income, we see how quickly mortgage payments can become a struggle, with many relying on limited savings or family support. Protection is there to help provide a financial safety net when life doesn’t go to plan.”
 
 

 

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

Health shocks leave 1 in 4 unable to pay their mortgage
One in four (28%) homeowners have fallen into financial difficulty due to illness or injury. One in five (20%) borrowers have no savings safety net at
More men must act earlier on cancer signs
Aviva paid out over £43m for prostate and testicular cancer claims across its individual critical illness and life insurance products in 2025. Awarene
Two thirds of a million turn to private healthcare in 2025
Total private health admissions – including self-pay – within touching distance of reaching 1 million per year. Growth in the private market continues

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.