Learning aim
Pupils can explain what a mortgage is, identify the four key components (deposit, term, interest rate, monthly repayment), and calculate basic monthly repayments.
National Curriculum links
- PSHE Association KS4 L19: about credit and the consequences of borrowing
- Citizenship KS4: financial products and services including mortgages
- Maths KS4: compound interest, percentage change, and financial mathematics
What you'll need
- Mortgage anatomy diagram (deposit + principal + interest + term)
- Affordability rule chart (4.5× salary)
- Sample mortgage scenarios worksheet
- Calculators
- Repayment lookup table
Lesson structure (60 minutes)
HOOK
TEACH
GUIDED
CHALLENGE
PLENARY
Adapting for all learners
Support (working below ARE)
Use round-number scenarios (£200k house, 5% rate, 25 years). Use a pre-printed monthly repayment table to look up rather than calculate. Focus on understanding the four components.
Stretch (working above ARE)
Compare 25-year vs 30-year mortgage on the same house. Which has higher monthly repayment? Which costs more in TOTAL interest paid? Discuss the trade-off — lower monthly payment vs paying more over time.
SEND adaptations
For pupils with dyscalculia: use round numbers (£200k house, 5% rate, 25 years gives a clean monthly figure). Provide the lookup table prominently. For pupils with autism: provide a step-by-step "questions to ask when getting a mortgage" card.
EAL support
Vocabulary: "mortgage", "deposit", "principal", "term", "interest rate", "monthly repayment", "affordability", "secured loan". Sentence frame: "A mortgage of £___ over ___ years at ___% costs £___ per month."
Assessment criteria
Pupils can: (1) define mortgage in their own words; (2) name the four key components; (3) calculate a monthly repayment using the lookup table; (4) explain why a bigger deposit usually means a cheaper mortgage.
Homework pack
Four activities to understand UK mortgages. ~30 minutes.
Mortgage vocabulary
What pupils do: Define these 6 terms: deposit, loan-to-value (LTV), fixed-rate mortgage, variable-rate mortgage, mortgage term, repayment vs interest-only.
Expected output: A 6-row vocabulary table.
Marking guidance: 1 mark per accurate definition. 6 marks total.
Deposit calculation
What pupils do: Sarah wants to buy a £250,000 house. She needs at least a 10% deposit. How much is that? How long would she need to save at £400/month? What about at £800/month?
Expected output: Three calculations.
Marking guidance: 2 marks each: £25k deposit, ~62 months at £400, ~31 months at £800. 6 marks total.
Monthly payment
What pupils do: Use an online mortgage calculator: a £200,000 mortgage over 25 years at 5% interest. What's the monthly payment? What's the total cost over 25 years?
Expected output: Two figures + a 2-sentence reflection on total interest cost.
Marking guidance: 2 marks for monthly (~£1,169), 2 marks for total (~£350,000), 2 marks for reflection.
Extension (optional)
What pupils do: What is "Stamp Duty Land Tax" (SDLT)? When does a first-time buyer have to pay it? When don't they? Find the 2026/27 thresholds.
Expected output: A research-based 4-point answer.
Marking guidance: Up to 8 marks for accurate, complete research.
Family discussion prompt (safeguarding-aware)
Ask a working adult: "Did you save up for a house? How long did it take, and what was hardest about it?"
Classroom safeguarding
Related lesson plans
- ISAs explained — the tax-free way to save (KS4 · Year 10)
- Credit cards — how they work and the minimum payment trap (KS4 · Year 11)
- Compound interest in action — why time beats rate (KS3 · Year 9)
- All lesson plans (KS1 · KS2 · KS3 · KS4) →