Everything you need to know about overpaying your mortgage with TSB Bank: the annual allowance, Early Repayment Charges, how to set up overpayments, and the specific quirks that separate TSB from other lenders.
Standard 10% rule. TSB separated from Lloyds in 2013 and has independent systems. This is the amount you can overpay each year without triggering an Early Repayment Charge. Any overpayment within the allowance is applied directly to your capital balance, reducing the interest charged on the mortgage from the next monthly statement onward.
For a fuller explanation of how annual allowances work across UK lenders, see our plain-English guide to the 10% rule.
TSB offers a "borrow back" feature on some products, letting you reclaim previous overpayments as a drawdown rather than remortgaging, useful if you've overpaid aggressively and later need funds.
If you exceed your annual allowance, or repay the mortgage in full during a fix period, TSB charges an Early Repayment Charge on the amount above the cap. The typical structure is: Typically 1–5% tapering across the fix period.
ERCs apply only during the incentive period (usually the fix). Once your fix ends, overpayments are typically unlimited and ERC-free. Our full ERC guide explains how these penalties are calculated and when they're worth paying anyway.
TSB accepts overpayments through several channels: Online banking, mobile app, phone, branch. The exact process varies by product, but typically involves:
The answer depends on your specific circumstances, not on your lender. The core question is whether your TSB mortgage rate is higher than the after-tax return you'd get on the money elsewhere. Use these tools to work it out:
The definitive source for TSB's current overpayment rules is the lender's own documentation: TSB's official overpayment page. Always verify specific figures (allowance percentage, ERC rates, minimums) against your individual mortgage offer document, rules can vary between products within the same lender.
For regulated advice on your specific situation, speak to a whole-of-market mortgage broker. General UK mortgage information is also available from MoneyHelper (the government-backed guidance service) and the FCA's consumer mortgage pages.