In 2019 mortgage holders had a £61 surplus after covering essential bills, they now face a £147 a month shortfall, figures from the latest Citizens Advice cost-of-living dashboard show.
Some groups of mortgage holders coming to Citizens Advice for debt advice are shouldering greater negative budgets than others as soaring interest rates compound existing cost-of-living pressures and structural inequalities.
People of colour (£276), single parents (£182) and disabled people (£164), are all experiencing bigger shortfalls than others.
Citizens Advice analysis also shows the number of mortgage holders it’s helping with crisis support – food bank referrals and emergency charitable grants – has increased by 177% between the six months of 2020 and the same period in 2023 (1,521 to 4,215).
As more mortgage holders seek support, Citizens Advice is also helping record numbers of private renters with homelessness and with Section 21 ’no fault’ evictions. A trend which suggests landlords may be selling their properties due to increasing costs or hiking rents to unaffordable levels.
With housing costs pushing increasing numbers of people into the red across the spectrum, Citizens Advice is calling for a small targeted fund for mortgage holders on low incomes who are at real risk of losing their home.
The charity is also urging the government to bring forward the long-awaited Renters Reform Bill and give renters the protection and improved rights they desperately need.
Citizens Advice chief executive Dame Clare Moriarty comments: “Our latest analysis is a sobering reminder that, despite cutting their spending back to the absolute minimum, too many people are simply living on empty.
She adds: “The government must look at ways of preventing mortgage holders and renters from falling further into the abyss.”
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