The Bank of England has hiked interest rates to 3% – but what exactly does it mean for your mortgages, debts and savings? We explain everything you need to know
UK interest rates have been hiked to 3% as the Bank of England confirms its biggest single rate rise in 33 years.
The Bank of England is also now warning the country could face its longest recession on record, piling more misery onto struggling Brits.
The base rate has been increased by 0.75 percentage points – up from 2.25%. It marks the biggest single rate increase since 1989, and means interest rates remain at a 14-year high.
Today is also the eighth time in a row the Bank of England has decided to increase its base rate. Interest rates were at just 0.1% a year ago.