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What Does a 25-Basis-Point Increase Mean for Your Home and Car Loan?

 

 

By: Abraham Eita

 

“Repo rate increased from 6.50% to 6.75%” was the headline on 17 June 2026. But what does that mean in practical terms for households financing a home or a vehicle?

The repo rate is the interest rate at which the Bank of Namibia lends money to commercial banks, and changes in that rate typically feed through to lending rates charged to consumers.

On 29 May 2026, the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) increased its repo rate by 25 basis points. The decision was aimed at curbing inflation, supporting the rand, and responding to rising costs, including higher fuel prices that were adding to living costs.

For Namibia, the move by SARB was a strong signal. On 17 June 2026, the Bank of Namibia also increased its repo rate by 25 basis points. Given Namibia’s monetary policy link to South Africa through the Common Monetary Area (CMA), a policy response of this nature was broadly expected.

In a closely integrated monetary framework such as the CMA, policy alignment is often necessary to preserve macroeconomic stability. Even so, the increase has real implications for household borrowing costs, particularly for home loan owners and vehicle loans owners.

Since August 2024, the repo rate has declined from 7.75% to 6.50%, easing debt-servicing costs for many consumers over that period.

This latest adjustment is the first increase in nearly three years, and it raises a practical question for borrowers: how much more might they now pay each month on a home loan? To illustrate the effect, consider three mortgage scenarios: a N$800,000 home loan, a N$1 million home loan and a N$2 million home loan.

Assuming a baseline mortgage interest rate of 11% and that commercial banks pass on the full 25-basis-point increase, the interest rate on these loans would rise to 11.25%.

On a simplified annual interest basis, before considering the remaining loan term, amortisation structure and other charges, a borrower with an N$800,000 home loan would face about N$2,000 more in interest costs a year, roughly N$167 per month. For a N$1 million home loan, the additional interest cost would be about N$2,500 a year, roughly N$208 per month.

For a N$2 million home loan, the increase would amount to about N$5,000 a year, roughly N$417 per month. While a 25-basis-point increase may appear modest, its effect becomes more visible when applied across household balance sheets and the wider economy.

The impact of the 25-basis-point increase is not limited to mortgages. It also matters for households with vehicle loans, particularly at a time when household debt remains above N$70 billion and instalment and leasing finance continues to be one of the strongest-growing areas of consumer credit.

With vehicle financing supported by stronger demand and improved availability of imported models, even a modest increase in lending rates can add to monthly repayment pressures for car owners.

To illustrate the effect, consider two vehicle-loan scenarios: a N$500,000 vehicle loan and a N$1 million vehicle loan.

Commercial banks typically price vehicle finance at the prime rate, plus or minus a margin depending on the customer’s risk profile, affordability assessment and the bank’s credit terms. For this illustration, the prime rate is used as the baseline rate.

Before the 25-basis-point increase, the prime rate was 10%; after the increase, it rose to 10.25%.

On a simplified annual interest basis, before considering the loan term, repayment structure, deposit, insurance, fees and other charges, a borrower with a N$500,000 vehicle loan would face about N$1,250 more in interest costs a year, or roughly N$104 per month. For a N$1 million vehicle loan, the additional interest cost would be about N$2,500 a year, or roughly N$208 per month.

While these amounts may appear relatively small in isolation, they become more significant for households already managing higher living costs and multiple debt obligations.

Will you still qualify for the same loan amount? The increase in the interest rates will affect loan affordability assessments. When banks calculate whether a household qualifies for a home or vehicle loan, they consider income, existing debt obligations and the ability to absorb higher repayments.

A higher lending rate may therefore reduce the maximum loan amount some borrowers qualify for, especially where household budgets are already stretched.

In response, households have to delay major purchases or cut back on discretionary spending such as entertainment, travel, clothing and other non-essential items. The broader economic effect is that higher borrowing costs can slow household consumption, even when the increase appears small on paper.

For consumers, the key message is simple: a 25-basis-point increase may not radically change monthly repayments, but it does reduce financial breathing room and makes careful budgeting more important.

The monetary space needs to start being reflective of local realities rather than just being reactionary to South African decisions. This is a medium-term to long-term goal; however, the realities are felt today in every repo rate change.

abrahamheita100@gmail.com

 

 

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