The $30 million toe in the water

According to the Office for National Statistics, homeowners with mortgages have seen their costs rise at a faster rate than renters over the last five years. the data also shows that the cost of living gap between mortgaged households and renters may be narrowing, with private renters seeing their costs rise by 3 .7 per cent on average compared to 3.6 per cent for those with a mortgage over the last 12 months.

Homeowners with mortgages have been hit harder by inflation than renters, according to figures released from the Office for National Statistics. Overall, household costs inflation was 3.6 per cent in the year to March, according to ONS. This inflation rate tracks the rate at which the price of goods and services such as food, housing, energy, and transport increase over time.

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But analysis of the data shows that , over the last five years, those with a mortgage have seen their costs rise at a faster rate than renters. Mortgaged homeowners have seen 37.6 per cent inflation, compared with 30.7 per cent for private renters. It still means that for every £100 a mortgaged homeowner was having to spend five years ago, they are now having to fork out £137.60 for exactly the same lifestyle.

Renters and mortgaged homeowners have been hammered by rising rents and higher mortgage rates respectively over the last few years. Another jump: ONS's household costs inflation rate tracks shows that renters have seen a personal rate of inflation of 30.7% over the last five years.

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The cost of living gap between mortgaged households and renters may be narrowing, however. Over the last 12 months, private renters saw their costs rise by 3.7 per cent on average compared to 3.6 per cent for those with a mortgage. The ONS also found that lower earners, who are more likely to rent, have been impacted more by inflation than high earners in the last year.

Lower earners faced inflation at 3.7 per cent over the last 12 months while higher earners saw their costs rise by 3.5 per cent on average. For retirees, inflation in the year to March was 3.6 per cent, compared to 3.7 per cent for working households. Over a five-year period, retirees have faced slightly less price pain, seeing their costs rise 33.4 per cent on average compared to 34.1 per cent on average for working households.

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While renters are unlikely to see the costs of their rent fall, mortgaged households could see their rate of inflation fall if and when mortgage rates start to come down.. At present, this does not look like happening anytime soon with the Bank of England closely watching the inflationary impact from the conflict in the Middle East.

The Bank of England opted to hold interest rates at its last three meetings at 3.75 per cent - in February, March and in April. The central bank uses interest rate rises as a lever to curb borrowing and spending when inflation gets too high, so when inflation is falling,this gives it headroom to reduce rates.

For those living on a tight budget there are no easy answers, as inflation squeezes even harder. No matter who someone is, the reality is that shopping with £100 today will buy a considerable amount less than it could five years ago.