Rising Euribor squeezes Portugal's mortgage holders again
With the ECB lifting rates to 2.25%, Euribor climbs and home-loan payments bite into family budgets once more.
Anyone with a home loan has learned to watch a strange word like it’s the weather forecast: Euribor. And the forecast has turned upward again. With the European Central Bank setting its reference rate at 2.25 percent, Euribor follows, and the mortgage payment rises with it.
The mechanics are simple. Most loans in Portugal are pegged to six- or twelve-month Euribor. When it climbs, the payment only changes on the contract’s review date, but change it does. For a family with an average loan, that’s tens of euros more a month, adding up over the year.
What you can do
The first step is knowing which index you’re on and when the next review lands. Then it’s worth shopping around: renegotiating the spread, moving the loan to another bank, or weighing a mixed rate are all on the table. There’s no magic fix, but there’s room to manoeuvre.
There’s a flip side too. Higher rates cool demand and help slow the climb in prices, something already showing up in the latest figures. For house hunters, it’s a small relief; for those who already bought, it’s the bill arriving.
The golden rule is not to do the maths on the rosy scenario alone. Anyone borrowing today should simulate the payment with Euribor higher, to avoid nasty surprises down the line.
See also: House prices jump 10.2% to a new record.
Imagem: Wikimedia Commons