In most cases, you cannot pay your mortgage directly with a credit card. Mortgage payments are normally taken by Direct Debit or bank transfer, and most lenders do not accept card payments for regular monthly instalments.
There are a few edge-case workarounds, but they are rarely practical and are not something we would typically recommend. If you are short for a month, there are usually safer and cheaper routes.
This guide explains what is possible, why it is rarely a good idea, and what to do instead.
When could a credit card be used?
The only time this tends to come up is when someone has a temporary cashflow gap and wants to avoid missing a mortgage payment.
In reality, there are two ways people try to do it.
1) Paying indirectly via a third party
Some payment services may allow bills to be paid by card, then pass funds to the lender. This is not a standard solution and it often comes with fees.
Even where it is technically possible, most borrowers decide it is not worth the cost or complexity.
2) Using a credit card to free up cash elsewhere
A more realistic “indirect” version is paying other essentials on a credit card for a short period, then using the cash you would have spent to cover the mortgage payment.
This is still debt, but it avoids trying to force a card payment into a system that is designed for bank payments.
Why it is not a long-term solution
Using a credit card to cover mortgage payments is usually a signal that the budget is under pressure. And credit cards are an expensive way to plug that gap.
High interest and compounding debt
Credit cards often carry high APRs. If you carry the balance, the cost can escalate quickly, especially if this becomes a repeated pattern.
Credit limits are not designed for mortgage-sized payments
Mortgage payments are large relative to typical credit card limits. Even one or two months can push utilisation high, which can also affect your credit profile.
It can make remortgaging harder
High credit card balances can reduce affordability and make lenders more cautious. Even if you have never missed a mortgage payment, a large unsecured balance can limit options when you come to refinance.
Why brokers don’t usually recommend it
A mortgage is secured debt at a relatively low rate compared to unsecured borrowing. Replacing it with credit card borrowing is usually moving in the wrong direction financially.
It can also create a cycle where you keep the mortgage up to date, but the unsecured debt becomes the new problem.
That does not mean it is never used. But if it is used, it should be a short-term bridge with a clear plan to clear it quickly.
What to do instead if you are short one month
If you are struggling to make a payment, the priority is to act early. Most lenders are far more helpful before you miss a payment than after.
Speak to your lender early
If you think you will miss a payment, contact the lender straight away. There may be options that avoid arrears, depending on your circumstances.
Payment holiday or reduced payments
Some lenders may agree a temporary payment holiday or reduced payments. This is not guaranteed, and interest still accrues, but it can create breathing space.
The key point is to confirm how it will be recorded, and ensure it is treated properly rather than being marked as arrears.
Temporary switch to interest-only
If your lender allows it, a temporary switch to interest-only can reduce the monthly payment, sometimes materially.
It does not reduce what you owe, and you may need to make up the difference later, but it can help manage a short-term income shock.
Product transfer to reduce payments
If your current deal is ending, or you are already on the lender’s variable rate, a product transfer to a cheaper rate might reduce monthly costs.
Claim on relevant insurance cover
If you have protection in place, such as accident, sickness and unemployment cover, or income protection, check the policy terms and whether a claim is appropriate.
This is exactly the sort of scenario these policies are designed for.
Consider budget triage, not just borrowing
If the issue is temporary, it can be better to reduce spending or restructure higher-cost debt rather than turning the mortgage into credit card debt.
Why arrears should be avoided if possible
Once a mortgage payment is missed, you can fall into arrears. That can lead to fees, collections activity, and a much harder remortgage landscape.
If you are close to arrears, early communication and a plan with the lender is almost always better than silence.
Practical tips for staying on top of payments
- Keep an emergency buffer if possible, ideally several months of essential outgoings
- If income is uncertain, plan early rather than waiting for a missed payment
- Keep the lender informed if circumstances change
- Get advice early if you are juggling multiple debts
Summary
Paying a mortgage with a credit card is usually not possible directly, and even when you can do it indirectly it is rarely a good solution beyond a very short-term bridge.
If you are short for a month, the safer route is usually to speak to your lender early and explore temporary options, rather than shifting secured mortgage debt onto expensive unsecured borrowing.
To talk to one of our brokers about your situation, call us on 023 8235 2300 or send us an enquiry.



