The short answer
If your mortgage rate is above your expected after-tax investment return, overpay. Otherwise invest — but only after the emergency fund and pension match are full.
For a typical UK higher-rate taxpayer in 2026/27, that breakeven sits around a mortgage rate of 5.5%–6.5%: above this, overpayment usually wins; below it, ISA or SIPP investing usually wins. The exact number depends on the asset class, your tax rate, and how much risk you're willing to carry. The compound interest calculator shows the long-run difference.
The decision in three questions
- Do you have 3–6 months of expenses in an easy-access savings account? If no, fund that first. Neither overpaying nor investing is the right answer if you'd have to break a fixed bond or sell shares in a downturn to cover a boiler repair.
- Are you taking the full employer pension match? If your employer matches up to, say, 6% of salary and you're contributing 3%, the missing 3% is leaving free money on the table — typically 100% guaranteed return on day one. Capture that before any other decision.
- What is your mortgage rate vs your expected after-tax investment return? See the comparison table below.
Only when 1 and 2 are settled does the overpay-vs-invest comparison actually matter.
The rate comparison that drives the decision
Mortgage overpayment effectively gives you a risk-free, tax-free return equal to your mortgage rate. (Risk-free because it's certain; tax-free because mortgage interest isn't tax deductible for owner-occupiers, so the saved interest is in post-tax pounds.)
Investing gives you an expected pre-tax return at the asset's average rate, with volatility around that average. To compare them properly:
| Wrapper / asset | Pre-tax expected return | After-tax (40% rate) |
|---|---|---|
| Cash savings (easy access) | ~4.0% | ~2.4% |
| Cash ISA | ~4.0% | ~4.0% (no tax) |
| Stocks & Shares ISA, global equity | ~7% | ~7% (no tax) |
| SIPP, global equity (with 40% relief) | ~7% | ~9.3% effective on contribution |
| General Investment Account, global equity | ~7% | ~5.0% (after CGT/dividend tax) |
So a 5% fixed-rate mortgage beats Cash ISA but loses to Stocks & Shares ISA expected return. A 6.5% fixed-rate mortgage beats most expected investment returns risk-adjusted. A 3% fixed-rate mortgage is comfortably below expected investment returns and is rarely worth overpaying.
Worked example 1 — Higher-rate earner with 5.5% mortgage
£200,000 mortgage at 5.5% with 20 years remaining. £500/month spare cash. Higher-rate taxpayer with full ISA allowance available.
- Overpay £500/month. Saves about £67,000 of interest over the term and clears the mortgage 4 years early. Net "return" on the £120,000 of overpayments: 5.5% guaranteed, post-tax.
- Invest £500/month into an S&S ISA at 7% average return: ends 20 years later with about £260,000. Same £120,000 contributed.
- Net of mortgage interest paid (since you didn't overpay), the investing route comes out ahead by roughly £45,000 — but only if equity returns hit 7%. At 5%, the two routes are roughly tied. At 3%, overpayment wins by £30,000.
The investing route has higher expected value but real volatility. If you're 5 years from retirement, the volatility is itself a problem; if you're 25 years from retirement, time smooths it.
Worked example 2 — Same person, same numbers, but a 3% mortgage
Identical situation, but the mortgage rate is 3% (a fix taken in 2021 with several years still to run).
- Overpay. Saves about £35,000 of interest. Guaranteed 3% return.
- Invest. 7% expected return ends with ~£260,000 vs ~£167,000 from overpayment route. Investing is about £90,000 ahead in expectation.
At 3% mortgage, investing wins clearly even at conservative return assumptions. This is why the most rational behaviour for many UK households between 2020 and 2023 was: keep the cheap fixed-rate mortgage running, invest aggressively into ISAs and pensions.
The pension twist
Pension contributions in the UK get an immediate tax-relief boost most people under-rate. £100 sacrificed from a higher-rate salary becomes about £140 in your pension (or £166 if employer NI is shared). That is roughly 40–66% return on day one, before any market growth. Crowded out by no other UK financial decision.
So the strict rank order for spare cash, for most people, is:
- Emergency fund up to 3–6 months expenses.
- Pension up to the employer match.
- Pay off any non-mortgage debt above ~6% (credit cards, personal loans).
- If your mortgage rate is above ~6.5%, overpay it next.
- Otherwise, ISA / additional pension.
- Mortgage overpayment with anything left.
The ISA vs Pension comparison covers step 5 in detail. The mortgage calculator shows the interest savings from overpayment scenarios.
Common mistakes
- Overpaying a 2% mortgage. Almost certainly the wrong move — even a Cash ISA at 4% beats it, with no risk and full liquidity.
- Skipping the employer pension match. The single most expensive financial mistake British employees make. There is no investment in the UK system with a guaranteed 100% return — except this one, and most people leave it on the table.
- Using cash savings to overpay while carrying credit card debt. 19%+ APR credit card debt is the priority — overpaying a 5% mortgage while carrying it is a clear net loss.
- Hitting the 10% annual overpayment limit. Most fixed-rate mortgages allow 10% of the outstanding balance to be overpaid per year without an Early Repayment Charge. Going over triggers a fee that can wipe out years of interest savings. Check your mortgage offer carefully.
- Forgetting that mortgage overpayment is illiquid. Once paid, it's locked in. If you'd rather have flexibility, an offset mortgage or savings-linked product gives you the same interest saving without the lock-in.
Sources
MoneyHelper — overpaying your mortgage · Tax on savings interest · ISA rules. UK Tax Drag is educational and not regulated financial advice — see the disclaimer.