One in six homeowners has been forced to change their mortgage in the past three years in order to maintain repayments.
A news survey of 2000 people by Ocean Finance also found more than 18 per cent of homeowners with a mortgage had had to take action of some sort to carry on meeting their payments.
Around one in 12 (7.9 per cent) had to switch to an interest-only mortgage in the last three years. This product sees the customer paying off the interest on the loan every month, but not repaying any of the capital, which makes the monthly repayments cheaper.
However, this means that at the end of the term they do not own the property and will need to find a lump sum to repay the debt, perhaps by selling their home.
Another step taken by 7.6 per cent of respondents is to extend the term of their mortgage. This might mean extending the period of time they have to repay the loan from an initial 25 years to as much as 40 years.
While this means they should pay less each month, it is likely to see them paying more overall due to the interest they will continue to be charged over the extended period of the mortgage. A longer mortgage term may also mean people have to rethink their future plans, such as working later in life to continue repaying their mortgage, rather than retiring.
Just short of one in 20 homeowners revealed they had agreed with their lender to make temporary lower payments. Meanwhile, just over one in 50 homeowners was taking a temporary holiday from making payments.
Ian Williams, spokesman for Ocean, says low repossession figures have masked the fact that many borrowers are struggling.
“With the Bank of England currently predicting that it expects to start to raise the base rate of interest in the middle of next year, more homeowners may find that they start to struggle – especially if they are still on a standard variable rate or tracker mortgage. It might therefore be worth their while speaking to their existing lender or a mortgage broker about whether they could benefit from switching to a new mortgage now.”