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Europe Mortgage/Loan Broker - Market Share Analysis, Industry Trends & Statistics, Growth Forecasts (2026-2031)

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    Report

  • 130 Pages
  • March 2026
  • Region: Europe
  • Mordor Intelligence
  • ID: 6074427
The europe mortgage/Loan broker market size is projected to expand from USD 66.70 billion in 2025 and USD 75.88 billion in 2026 to USD 144.55 billion by 2031, registering a CAGR of 13.76% between 2026 to 2031. This report is Segmented by Type of Mortgage Loan (Conventional, Jumbo, Government-Insured, Other), Mortgage Loan Terms (30-Year, 20-Year, 15-Year, Other), Interest Rate (Fixed, Adjustable), Provider (Primary, Secondary), and Geography (UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, and More). Forecasts are in Value (USD).

Europe Mortgage/Loan Broker Market Trends and Insights

Advice-led Origination Share Rising (Europe-specific, 2026+)

Broker intermediation continues to entrench as the default path for many borrowers, driven by the need to navigate complex affordability rules, product eligibility, and documentation across lenders as markets emerge from the rate shock. The Europe mortgage loan brokers market benefits as borrowers prefer advice on fixed versus variable choices, early repayment options, and green-linked incentives that now require standardized disclosures under EU law . In the United Kingdom, large networks have scaled adviser capacity and client monitoring capabilities, which have supported higher productivity and revenue growth in 2025 and set up for elevated refinancing activity in 2026 as fixed-rate cohorts mature. In Germany, distribution platforms and national broker brands have expanded their technology stacks to speed pre-approvals and standardize lender connections, which complements banks that prefer to retain credit risk while outsourcing acquisition. In France and the Netherlands, stabilization in volumes and policy support for first-time buyers keep advice-led channels relevant as lenders seek throughput and borrowers seek certainty after recent volatility. Across major markets, this structural shift is anchored in cost and risk management needs at lenders and in the borrower’s preference for impartial product navigation, which together reinforce the Europe mortgage loan brokers market as a core origination route through 2031.

Regulatory Push for Suitability and Fair Value (EU/UK)

The UK Financial Conduct Authority’s Consumer Duty, with full rules extending to closed products in 2024, sets outcomes-based expectations for good faith, avoidance of foreseeable harm, and support for financial objectives across the mortgage lifecycle, which raises the bar on advice quality and client communications for intermediaries . Enhanced oversight of appointed representatives requires principal firms to maintain robust risk management and monitoring for networks, which favors scaled brokers that can spread compliance costs and invest in systems. In the European Union, the Mortgage Credit Directive review process highlights integration of energy performance data and sustainability features in disclosures, which nudges broker advice toward standardized green product suitability and clear risk-factor explanations. The European Banking Authority’s focus on consumer trends and product fairness further codifies expectations around transparency and creditworthiness, which supports a structured advisory environment for the Europe mortgage loan brokers market. Over the forecast horizon, these regulatory dynamics are expected to raise compliance intensity while simultaneously validating the role of professional intermediation for complex cases.

Affordability Squeeze and Transaction Slowdown (Rate Shock Hangover)

Higher borrowing costs since 2022 reduced affordability and housing transactions across the euro area, and the lagged repricing of existing loans continues to weigh on household budgets even as policy rates start to ease in 2026. A large share of euro-area mortgages remains sensitive to rate movements, and cohorts that originated at very low fixed rates during 2020-2021 are scheduled to reset at higher rates over the next few years, which creates budgeting stress for many households. Lower-income borrowers have higher exposure to adjustable-rate products and are therefore more affected by changes in interest rates, which depresses purchase intent and extends sales cycles for brokers serving first-time buyers. Household consumption shifted under the pressure of higher mortgage payments in 2024 and 2025, which dampened demand for home buying and slowed the pace of property-related spending. This environment requires brokers to manage longer lead times and to differentiate approaches between refinancing clients and stretched first-time purchasers, with advice on product structure and stress testing playing a central role.

Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
  • Green/Energy-Efficient Mortgages and EPBD-Driven Renovation Finance
  • Bank-led Lending Model Leveraging Broker Distribution
  • Compliance Burden from Consumer Duty and AR Oversight (UK/EU)
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.

Segment Analysis

Conventional mortgage loans accounted for an 83.67% share in 2025, reflecting their status as the core offering across major European geographies for borrowers with stable credit and deposit buffers, and this proportion underscores how lenders and brokers continue to place standard home purchase and refinance products at the center of origination. The Europe mortgage loan brokers market share for conventional loans is supported by broad lender panels and consistent underwriting rules, which simplify comparison and speed for borrowers seeking predictable terms. Country-level macroprudential settings, including loan-to-value and debt-service-to-income caps, shape the loan mix that brokers can arrange and influence how much borrowers must contribute toward deposits, which in turn guides advice around product type and tenor. Jumbo loans remain a niche for complex borrower profiles and are distributed through a combination of private banks and specialist lenders, where brokers add value by coordinating documentation and negotiating bespoke terms across multiple counterparties. In this environment, technology-enabled brokers aggregate lender responses faster and present structured options to clients, which helps maintain the centrality of conventional products even as policy and green incentives broaden choices.

Government-insured mortgages are projected to grow at a 9.00% CAGR over 2026-2031 as national schemes in several member states support first-time buyers and energy upgrades, which expand eligibility for clients with thinner deposits or non-standard income. The Europe mortgage loan brokers market benefits from these programs because intermediaries are well placed to help borrowers navigate eligibility criteria, assemble required documents, and coordinate with lenders that participate in subsidy or guarantee frameworks. As more banks introduce green mortgage variants that reward verified energy performance improvements, brokers are adding renovation-linked loan options to their panels, which often pair state-backed guarantees with rate incentives. Over the forecast period, this mix is likely to diversify the Europe mortgage loan brokers industry product set while keeping conventional loans the volume anchor in most markets.

Thirty-year mortgages held a 52.33% share in 2025, a reflection of borrower preference for lower monthly payments and lender comfort with amortization that aligns with retirement planning horizons in many EU markets. The Europe mortgage loan brokers market size for longer tenors remains supported by affordability considerations and by the need to offset higher nominal rates with extended terms, which many lenders have accommodated under local macroprudential limits. In France, company data show best-profile mortgage rates near 2.81% for 15 years and 2.92% for 20 years as of mid-2025, which demonstrates how term selection and pricing interact as rates normalize from their 2023 peaks . Markets with amortization requirements that increase required repayments at higher loan-to-value or debt-to-income levels also shape the real effective term for borrowers, which brokers must factor into suitability advice. Taken together, tenor selection has become a central part of the advice process, with brokers helping clients balance payment stability, total interest cost, and future refinancing options.

At the same time, very long terms in the 35-40-year range are gaining interest as affordability constraints persist for younger buyers and as lenders innovate within regulatory boundaries, which raises the need for clear advice on long-run costs and refinancing checkpoints. The Europe mortgage loan brokers market benefits when advisers can present comparable total cost projections and stress scenarios across 15, 20, 30, and longer terms, which supports informed decisions amid evolving rate expectations. Over 2026-2031, this segment is expected to grow as rules permit and as green-linked incentives are integrated into longer amortization plans, which can align energy savings with loan servicing capacity for certain borrowers.

Complete Report Scope:

  • By Type of Mortgage Loan
    • Conventional Mortgage Loan
    • Jumbo Loans
    • Government-Insured Mortgage Loans
    • Other Types of Mortgage Loan
  • By Mortgage Loan Terms
    • 30-Year Mortgage
    • 20-Year Mortgage
    • 15-Year Mortgage
    • Other Mortgage Loan Terms
  • By Interest Rate
    • Fixed-Rate
    • Adjustable-Rate
  • By Provider
    • Primary Mortgage Lender
    • Secondary Mortgage Lender
  • By Geography
    • United Kingdom
    • Germany
    • France
    • Italy
    • Spain
    • Netherlands
    • Sweden
    • Denmark
    • Rest of Europe

List of Companies Covered in this Report:

  • Mortgage Advice Bureau (UK)
  • London & Country Mortgages (UK)
  • Connells Group - Countrywide Mortgage Services (UK)
  • Stonebridge (UK)
  • Primis Mortgage Network (UK)
  • Openwork Partnership (UK)
  • Quilter Financial Planning (UK)
  • Habito (UK)
  • Trussle (UK)
  • Mojo Mortgages (UK)
  • John Charcol (UK)
  • Alexander Hall (UK)
  • Just Mortgages (UK)
  • Interhyp (DE)
  • Dr. Klein (DE)
  • Hüttig & Rompf (DE)
  • Baufi24 (DE)
  • CHECK24 Baufinanzierung (DE)
  • Meilleurtaux (FR)
  • CAFPI (FR)
  • Expander Advisors (PL)
  • MAXFINANCE (PT)

Additional Benefits:

  • The market estimate (ME) sheet in Excel format
  • 3 months of analyst support

Table of Contents

1 Introduction
1.1 Study Assumptions & Market Definition
1.2 Scope of the Study
2 Research Methodology3 Executive Summary
4 Market Landscape
4.1 Market Overview
4.2 Market Drivers
4.2.1 Advice-led origination share rising (Europe-specific, 2026+)
4.2.2 Regulatory push for suitability and fair value (EU/UK)
4.2.3 Green/energy-efficient mortgages and EPBD-driven renovation finance
4.2.4 Bank-led lending model leveraging broker distribution
4.2.5 Digital identity and e-signature enablement (eIDAS 2.0)
4.2.6 Open banking and data access (PSD3/PSR) streamlining affordability
4.3 Market Restraints
4.3.1 Affordability squeeze and transaction slowdown (rate shock hangover)
4.3.2 Compliance burden from Consumer Duty and AR oversight (UK/EU)
4.3.3 Cross-country product heterogeneity (rate types, norms)
4.3.4 Limited/uneven state guarantee schemes vs. US-style insurance
4.4 Value / Supply-Chain Analysis
4.5 Regulatory Landscape
4.6 Technological Outlook
4.7 Porter’s Five Forces Analysis
4.7.1 Competitive Rivalry
4.7.2 Threat of New Entrants
4.7.3 Bargaining Power of Buyers
4.7.4 Bargaining Power of Suppliers (lenders, lead sources, platforms)
4.7.5 Threat of Substitutes (direct-to-lender, price-comparison journeys)
4.8 Affordability & stress-testing frameworks by country
4.9 Cross-border mortgage flows & eligibility within EU/EEA
4.10 Price-comparison and lead-generation platforms in the broker funnel
5 Market Size & Growth Forecasts
5.1 By Type of Mortgage Loan
5.1.1 Conventional Mortgage Loan
5.1.2 Jumbo Loans
5.1.3 Government-Insured Mortgage Loans
5.1.4 Other Types of Mortgage Loan
5.2 By Mortgage Loan Terms
5.2.1 30-Year Mortgage
5.2.2 20-Year Mortgage
5.2.3 15-Year Mortgage
5.2.4 Other Mortgage Loan Terms
5.3 By Interest Rate
5.3.1 Fixed-Rate
5.3.2 Adjustable-Rate
5.4 By Provider
5.4.1 Primary Mortgage Lender
5.4.2 Secondary Mortgage Lender
5.5 By Geography
5.5.1 United Kingdom
5.5.2 Germany
5.5.3 France
5.5.4 Italy
5.5.5 Spain
5.5.6 Netherlands
5.5.7 Sweden
5.5.8 Denmark
5.5.9 Rest of Europe
6 Competitive Landscape
6.1 Market Concentration
6.2 Strategic Moves
6.3 Market Share Analysis
6.4 Company Profiles {(includes Global level Overview, Market level overview, Core Segments, Financials as available, Strategic Information, Market Rank/Share for key companies, Products & Services, and Recent Developments)}
6.4.1 Mortgage Advice Bureau (UK)
6.4.2 London & Country Mortgages (UK)
6.4.3 Connells Group - Countrywide Mortgage Services (UK)
6.4.4 Stonebridge (UK)
6.4.5 Primis Mortgage Network (UK)
6.4.6 Openwork Partnership (UK)
6.4.7 Quilter Financial Planning (UK)
6.4.8 Habito (UK)
6.4.9 Trussle (UK)
6.4.10 Mojo Mortgages (UK)
6.4.11 John Charcol (UK)
6.4.12 Alexander Hall (UK)
6.4.13 Just Mortgages (UK)
6.4.14 Interhyp (DE)
6.4.15 Dr. Klein (DE)
6.4.16 Hüttig & Rompf (DE)
6.4.17 Baufi24 (DE)
6.4.18 CHECK24 Baufinanzierung (DE)
6.4.19 Meilleurtaux (FR)
6.4.20 CAFPI (FR)
6.4.21 Expander Advisors (PL)
6.4.22 MAXFINANCE (PT)
7 Market Opportunities & Future Outlook
7.1 White-space & unmet-need assessment

Companies Mentioned (Partial List)

A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:

  • Mortgage Advice Bureau (UK)
  • London & Country Mortgages (UK)
  • Connells Group – Countrywide Mortgage Services (UK)
  • Stonebridge (UK)
  • Primis Mortgage Network (UK)
  • Openwork Partnership (UK)
  • Quilter Financial Planning (UK)
  • Habito (UK)
  • Trussle (UK)
  • Mojo Mortgages (UK)
  • John Charcol (UK)
  • Alexander Hall (UK)
  • Just Mortgages (UK)
  • Interhyp (DE)
  • Dr. Klein (DE)
  • Hüttig & Rompf (DE)
  • Baufi24 (DE)
  • CHECK24 Baufinanzierung (DE)
  • Meilleurtaux (FR)
  • CAFPI (FR)
  • Expander Advisors (PL)
  • MAXFINANCE (PT)