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Mortgage lending in Belgium is entering a new regulatory phase. The National Bank of Belgium (NBB) has announced a package of macroprudential policy adjustments for 2026 that will materially alter how lenders calculate borrower affordability, classify mortgage exposures, and allocate capital against residential loan books. With key measures scheduled to take effect from 1 July 2026, Belgian banks, non-bank lenders, and mortgage intermediaries face compressed timelines to update credit policies, retrain underwriting teams, and recalibrate internal models. This guide provides a practitioner-level interpretation of the changes, compliance checklists, worked examples, and a litigation-risk assessment to help credit policy teams and in-house counsel act decisively before the effective dates arrive.
The NBB’s 2026 macroprudential package targets three interconnected areas of mortgage lending in Belgium: income and affordability calculation methodology, loan-to-value (LTV) supervisory expectations, and the countercyclical capital buffer (CCyB) applicable to Belgian residential mortgage exposures. The practical effect is that lenders will need to apply stricter treatment of rental income, apply aggregated debt-service calculations across a borrower’s full property portfolio, and hold additional capital against certain mortgage exposures.
Credit policy teams and in-house counsel should prioritise the following five actions immediately:
Industry observers expect these measures to have the greatest impact on lenders with significant buy-to-let portfolios and borrowers who hold multiple financed properties. The sections below unpack each element in detail.
The NBB exercises macroprudential authority in Belgium under the Law of 25 April 2014 on the status and supervision of credit institutions and stockbroking firms, as amended. This legislation empowers the NBB to impose capital buffers, set borrower-based lending standards, and issue binding communications and recommendations directed at credit institutions and other mortgage lenders operating in Belgium. The Financial Services and Markets Authority (FSMA) retains parallel supervisory competence over consumer protection, advertising, and conduct-of-business obligations for mortgage credit, as detailed on the FSMA mortgage overview page.
The 2026 package represents the NBB’s most significant recalibration of mortgage-related macroprudential tools since it introduced borrower-based measures in 2020. The adjustments respond to evolving risks in the Belgian residential property market, including sustained house-price growth, rising household indebtedness, and the increased prevalence of buy-to-let financing. The NBB has framed these changes as preventive, designed to strengthen lender resilience and protect borrowers from over-indebtedness rather than restrict credit access outright.
Three categories of measures are relevant to mortgage lending in Belgium:
| Date | Measure | Immediate Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 1 July 2026 | Revised income/affordability calculation rules | Lenders must apply adjusted treatment of rental income and aggregated debt service; updated thresholds for affordability checks on all new mortgage applications from this date |
| Q3 2026 | Adjustment to countercyclical capital buffer guidance | Certain mortgage exposures may require higher capital; affects capital-adequacy planning and ICAAP submissions |
| Q4 2026 | Supervisory guidance on model backtesting and documentation | Banks must document internal rating models and affordability-model results; supervisory review escalations possible during 2027 SREP cycle |
Lenders should note that the 1 July 2026 effective date applies to new mortgage applications received on or after that date. Applications already in pipeline as of 30 June 2026 may, subject to institution-specific interpretation, be processed under existing methodology, though the likely practical effect will be that institutions adopt the new rules early to avoid dual-track processing.
Before examining the 2026 changes, it is essential to understand the baseline mortgage rules in Belgium. Belgian mortgage law is anchored in the Civil Code (Book III, Title XVIII on mortgage, hypotheek/hypothèque) and supplemented by the Law of 4 August 1992 on Mortgage Credit (as substantially amended). The following foundational requirements apply to all mortgage lending in Belgium:
These foundational mortgage rules in Belgium remain unchanged by the 2026 macroprudential package. What changes is how lenders must assess whether a prospective borrower can afford the mortgage, and how much capital lenders must hold against the resulting exposure.
The most operationally significant element of the NBB’s 2026 package for mortgage lending in Belgium is the revised methodology for mortgage income calculation. Lenders have historically enjoyed considerable discretion in how they assessed borrower affordability. The NBB’s updated framework narrows that discretion in three targeted ways.
First, the treatment of rental income from existing investment properties is now subject to a mandatory haircut. Where a borrower presents rental income from a property already in their portfolio, lenders must apply a discount factor, reflecting vacancy risk, maintenance costs, and potential rental-income volatility, before incorporating that income into the affordability calculation. Early indications suggest the discount factor will be set at or near 20 %, meaning only 80 % of documented net rental income may be counted.
Second, the NBB requires that affordability calculations incorporate the borrower’s aggregated debt-service obligations across all financed properties, not merely the property being financed. This prevents a borrower from appearing comfortably affordable on a standalone basis while carrying unsustainable total obligations across a multi-property portfolio.
Third, lenders must apply a stressed interest rate, a buffer above the contractual rate, when modelling the borrower’s capacity to service the mortgage under adverse conditions. The NBB’s updated guidance reinforces that this stress rate must be applied consistently across the entire portfolio, not selectively.
The following two worked examples illustrate the practical impact of the revised mortgage lending criteria on borrower affordability. Both examples use simplified figures for clarity.
Example 1: Single-income borrower, owner-occupier (no investment properties)
| Parameter | Before 1 July 2026 | From 1 July 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Gross monthly income | €4,500 | €4,500 |
| Net qualifying income (after tax/social charges) | €3,150 | €3,150 |
| Maximum debt-service ratio applied | ~50 % (lender discretion) | ~50 % (now supervisory benchmark) |
| Maximum monthly mortgage payment | €1,575 | €1,575 |
| Stress-rate buffer applied | Varies by lender | Standardised buffer (e.g., contractual rate + 1.5 %) |
For the single-income, single-property borrower, the practical impact on mortgage affordability in Belgium is modest. The main change is that the stress-rate buffer is now applied more uniformly, which may reduce the maximum qualifying loan amount slightly.
Example 2: Dual-property owner, buy-to-let borrower
| Parameter | Before 1 July 2026 | From 1 July 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Gross monthly employment income | €5,000 | €5,000 |
| Gross monthly rental income (existing property) | €1,200 (100 % counted) | €960 (80 % after haircut) |
| Total qualifying income | €4,700 (net) | €4,510 (net, with rental haircut) |
| Existing mortgage obligations (Property 1) | Not always fully aggregated | €850/month (mandatory aggregation) |
| Residual capacity for new mortgage | ~€1,500/month | ~€1,405/month |
For the dual-property borrower, the combined effect of the rental-income haircut and mandatory aggregation reduces maximum borrowing capacity by approximately 6–8 %. For borrowers holding three or more financed properties, the cumulative impact on lender appetite and achievable loan amounts is expected to be significantly more pronounced.
While Belgium has no statutory LTV cap, the NBB has long issued supervisory expectations segmenting acceptable LTV practice by borrower type. The 2026 package reinforces these expectations with more granular benchmarks. Industry observers expect the updated guidance to distinguish between owner-occupied first purchases (where LTVs above 90 % may remain tolerable within defined portfolio limits), subsequent owner-occupied purchases (typically capped at 80–85 % LTV in supervisory practice), and buy-to-let or investment properties (where LTVs above 80 % are likely to attract heightened supervisory scrutiny).
On amortisation, the NBB’s expectations favour fully amortising structures. Interest-only or bullet-repayment mortgages, uncommon in Belgium but not prohibited, face additional capital charges under the revised framework. Lenders offering non-standard amortisation profiles should document a clear credit rationale and maintain enhanced records for supervisory review.
The stress-rate buffer is now expected to be applied as a minimum floor across all new mortgage applications, removing the previous variability between institutions. The likely practical effect will be that lenders who previously used lower stress buffers will see a measurable reduction in qualifying loan amounts for marginal borrowers.
Beyond the borrower-facing measures, the NBB’s 2026 package includes adjustments to the countercyclical capital buffer (CCyB) applicable to Belgian residential mortgage exposures. The CCyB is a macroprudential instrument that requires banks to hold additional Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) capital during periods of excessive credit growth, creating a buffer that can be released during downturns. The European Systemic Risk Board (ESRB) provides the harmonised framework, while the NBB sets the buffer rate for Belgian exposures.
The Q3 2026 adjustment to the CCyB rate means that banks with significant Belgian mortgage books will need to reassess their internal capital-adequacy processes (ICAAP). The impact on lenders depends on the size and risk profile of their residential mortgage portfolio. Institutions with concentrated Belgian mortgage exposures, particularly those with elevated buy-to-let or high-LTV segments, face the most material capital implications.
Capital planning teams should model three scenarios: (1) a baseline scenario applying the new CCyB rate to the existing portfolio; (2) a growth scenario reflecting planned origination volumes at revised mortgage lending criteria; and (3) a stress scenario combining portfolio deterioration with the higher buffer requirement. Early engagement with the NBB’s supervisory teams during the 2027 Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP) cycle is advisable for institutions expecting material capital impact.
Additionally, risk-weighted asset (RWA) calculations may shift for institutions using the internal ratings-based (IRB) approach, as the revised supervisory expectations on LTV and amortisation feed into loss-given-default (LGD) parameter estimates. Institutions on the standardised approach will be affected primarily through the CCyB add-on rather than through RWA recalibration.
The NBB’s supervisory expectations differ by entity type. The following table summarises Belgian mortgage compliance obligations across the three principal categories of mortgage providers:
| Entity Type | Affordability Rules | CCyB Capital Requirements | Reporting to NBB |
|---|---|---|---|
| Banks (credit institutions) | Full compliance required from 1 July 2026 | Applicable, must include in ICAAP and capital planning | Quarterly prudential reporting; SREP documentation |
| Non-bank mortgage lenders | Full compliance required from 1 July 2026 | May apply proportionally depending on regulatory status | Annual supervisory reporting; enhanced documentation obligations |
| Mortgage intermediaries (brokers) | Must verify that originating lender’s affordability assessment complies | Not directly applicable | FSMA conduct-of-business reporting; no direct NBB capital reporting |
Mortgage intermediaries should be aware that although the CCyB does not apply directly to them, the FSMA’s conduct-of-business supervision includes an obligation to verify that the creditworthiness assessment conducted by the lending institution meets applicable standards. Intermediaries who facilitate loans that subsequently prove non-compliant face potential FSMA enforcement action.
The NBB’s 2026 macroprudential adjustments will not affect all borrowers equally. Mortgage affordability in Belgium will tighten most visibly for three groups:
Lenders should proactively update borrower-facing communications to explain the basis for any change in pre-approved amounts or application outcomes. Clear, compliant disclosure reduces both reputational risk and the likelihood of consumer complaints to the FSMA. Pre-contractual documentation, particularly the ESIS, should reflect the revised affordability methodology transparently.
The following step-by-step checklist is designed for credit policy teams, compliance officers, and in-house counsel preparing for the 1 July 2026 effective date. Each item includes recommended model clause language where applicable.
The transition to the NBB’s revised mortgage lending criteria creates several foreseeable dispute scenarios that lenders and their counsel should anticipate.
Scenario 1: Borrower challenges a credit refusal. A borrower whose application is declined under the new affordability methodology may argue that the lender applied the rules incorrectly, relied on inaccurate income data, or failed to give adequate reasons for the refusal. Under Belgian consumer credit law, lenders are required to provide a clear explanation for a negative creditworthiness assessment. Failure to do so may result in complaints to the FSMA or civil proceedings. Mitigation: ensure that every refusal letter references the specific affordability criterion that was not met and cites the applicable NBB standard.
Scenario 2: Pre-approval retracted during transition. Borrowers who received pre-approval under the old methodology before 1 July 2026 but whose applications are finalised after that date may find that the approved amount is reduced. This creates a risk of misrepresentation claims. Mitigation: include a clear caveat in all pre-approval communications stating that the indicative amount is subject to regulatory requirements in force at the time of final approval.
Scenario 3: Intermediary liability. Mortgage intermediaries who facilitate applications that do not comply with the revised standards may face FSMA enforcement or civil liability for failing to exercise adequate professional diligence. Mitigation: intermediaries should update their own internal checklists and obtain written confirmation from the originating lender that the affordability assessment has been conducted in accordance with the updated methodology.
Dispute escalation pathway:
Lenders who maintain thorough documentation, apply the revised methodology consistently, and communicate transparently with borrowers will be best positioned to defend against complaints and litigation arising from the transition.
The following phased implementation plan provides a practical roadmap for mortgage lending teams preparing for the NBB 2026 changes:
90-day plan (immediate priorities):
12-month roadmap (ongoing):
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dominique Blommaert at Janson Baugniet, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
The worked examples in this article use simplified figures for illustrative purposes. Credit policy teams should develop institution-specific scenarios calibrated to their portfolio composition and risk appetite. A modelling spreadsheet template for calculating borrower affordability under the revised NBB methodology is available separately (mortgage affordability calculator, forthcoming).
Summary of model clauses provided in this guide (template, adapt to bank policy):
Primary sources and resources for mortgage lending in Belgium:
For further guidance on structuring compliant mortgage products, updating credit policies, or navigating disputes arising from the NBB’s 2026 macroprudential changes, consult a Belgian banking and finance lawyer with specialist experience in credit and mortgage law. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory can help connect you with qualified practitioners in Belgium.
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