Across the region, banks have built a solid digital front door for mortgage seekers. A person exploring options will generally find the core information they expect, such as loan overviews, terms and conditions, annual percentage rate examples, price lists, legal disclaimers, and explanations of Euribor and interest rate structures. This material is not only widely present but also broadly consistent with its intent. The same is true for tools. Most banks offer a monthly repayment calculator, and nearly all provide a borrowing‑limit estimator. Many sites lay out the application process in plain terms and explain refinancing at a high level. Some go further, offering consultation booking directly from the mortgage page, specialized calculators such as fee estimators or home‑exchange tools or comparisons of annuity and linear repayment methods. Most banks surface information about state‑backed guarantees and, in some cases, highlight incentives for energy‑efficient homes. Chatbots appear on several sites, and downloadable borrower reminders are easy to find.
In short, the essentials are there, discoverable, and increasingly polished. Where differences emerge, they tend to concern depth, coherence, and how much content is scattered across subpages or PDFs versus consolidated in one place. But as a baseline, a prospective buyer can do much of their homework online without visiting a branch or waiting on a call. It seems banks have a herd mentality. So, how can a bank stand out?
This research is based on twelve semi‑structured interviews with recent mortgage borrowers1. Their stories provide insights into practical decisions, emotional responses, and points of friction at each step, from choosing a bank, applying online, handling documents, speaking with a loan officer, and living with the loan after approval. The insights are grouped to reflect the journey itself: discovery and research, the application process, and life after approval. Below, these insights are summarized and can serve as input for banks who wish to stand out in a customer-centric manner.
The Borrower’s Journey, Step by Step
1. Discovery and bank choice.
When people start looking for a mortgage, their thinking is pragmatic. The headline factor is the interest rate, and most borrowers compare several offers (often three or four) to get a feeling for what the market will really give them. Those comparisons are not purely academic. Borrowers bring competing offers back to their preferred bank to negotiate, and they become more confident negotiators with each experience. At the same time, many choose to stay with their home bank even when another lender tempts them with a slightly better rate. Here, convenience matters. Daily banking already sits there, account history is known, and paperwork tends to feel lighter when you don’t split your financial life across institutions. Trust and familiarity also play a role, as does remembered service quality. For some, speed nudges the decision as much as price. If a site’s forms feel slow or bureaucratic, the motivation to save a few basis points gives way to the desire to get things done without friction. People are sensitive to fees and down‑payment requirements, but these sit behind the interest rate and the overall sense that the process will be manageable.
2. Early digital exploration and pre‑application.
Before sending any formal application, borrowers typically turn to online calculators. These tools help them gauge affordability bands, sanity‑check monthly payments, and narrow a target price range. The calculators feel quick and empowering at first glance, and they encourage prospective buyers to keep exploring on their own time without booking branch visits. Yet several interviewees felt uneasy about how closely these early numbers track reality. Calculators are viewed as directional rather than decisive. Shifts in Euribor and individualized underwriting can move figures meaningfully, and people learn this quickly once they start receiving tailored offers. As a result, calculators anchor expectations but do not resolve them.
3. Submitting the first application.
When the moment comes to apply, digital forms are generally appreciated. People value the ability to submit details whenever it suits them, then wait for a response without rearranging a workday. The first wave of interactions is straightforward: a form goes in, an initial decision or request for more information comes back, and a loan officer introduces themselves. Borrowers note, however, that some banks expect a specific property link early in the process. This sequence feels backwards to many first‑time buyers. They want clarity on affordability before they commit emotionally to a particular apartment or house. Several applicants end up submitting a similar property as a proxy and swapping links later. The net effect is a sense of uncertainty about what step truly comes first, especially when friends advise applying early for pre‑approval while banks’ forms implicitly assume a chosen property.
4. Communication and guidance.
Once contact is established, phone calls arrive quickly to clarify details, answer urgent questions, or discuss a negotiation point. People recognize the speed and usefulness of a call, but many prefer email for the main thread. Email creates a record they can revisit, share with a partner or parent, and use to compare offers in a calm, deliberate way. What many borrowers miss most at this stage is a clear, written roadmap: a step‑by‑step guide to what happens next, who does what, in what order, and why. Lacking that map, first‑time buyers describe stress, second‑guessing, and a reliance on peers or realtors to fill gaps the bank could have covered. The role of the loan officer is pivotal. Empathetic, well‑paced explanations lower anxiety and build trust; hurried conversations that feel more like product pushes than guidance undermine confidence. Some borrowers mention being steered toward a particular repayment type without a transparent discussion of trade‑offs, which leaves a bad taste even if the final offer is competitive.
5. Documents, proofs, and repetition.
The administrative heart of the process still produces most of the friction. Applicants often submit the same bank statements to multiple lenders, sometimes more than once, and not always through the same channel. One bank may use an integration that pulls data with consent; another asks for emailed PDFs; a third requests exports in a specific format. People with multiple accounts feel this burden more acutely, and small mismatches between banks’ requirements create extra loops. Beyond statements, borrowers gather items that depend on status and product choice (residence permits, diplomas linked to state guarantees, confirmations that a parental gift is not a loan) and they do not always know exactly where to obtain each document or why it is required. Transaction‑level questions add to the administrative load when bank analysts seek clarifications about transfers above a threshold or recurring payments to individuals. Those requests are understandable in principle, but they surprise first‑time applicants and make the process feel longer than expected.
6. Decision, signing, and immediate aftermath.
By the time a credit decision arrives and documents are prepared, most borrowers feel the process is under control. Notary visits (where applicable) and signatures follow a familiar script, even if the legal language remains dense. The emotional load lightens as the finish line comes into view. Where confusion remains, it now concerns mechanics: when payments will start, how they will be collected, what happens if the date needs to change, whether additional insurance choices are mandatory or optional, and when Euribor will first reset.
7. Living with the loan.
After disbursement, mortgages tend to fade into the background. Automatic withdrawals handle payments without reminders, and borrowers rarely log in to monitor progress unless something changes. This quiet is welcome, until it isn’t. Several people say they would like timely, personalized notices when Euribor resets, delivered in a way that makes the impact on next month’s payment unmistakable. A few describe confusion about the exact month when a reset applies or small discrepancies between expected and actual amounts caused by day‑count conventions. Rate volatility produces anxiety during periods of rising Euribor and curiosity when rates fall. Borrowers hear about friends renegotiating or refinancing but often do not pursue it themselves. The reasons are practical rather than philosophical: no simple way to judge whether it is worthwhile, uncertainty about fees, and the understandable reluctance to restart paperwork for a benefit that is hard to quantify quickly. Without prompts or a basic comparison tool, contemplation rarely becomes action. In daily life, the mortgage remains a large commitment managed with a light touch.
What Customers Want to See Improved
Taken together, these experiences point to a set of changes that customers consistently say would make the journey feel clearer, calmer, and more under their control.
- First, people want numbers they can trust earlier. Calculators should feel closer to reality, not because they promise a single outcome, but because they explain the assumptions behind the ranges and acknowledge how Euribor and underwriting factors move the result. Borrowers want to explore scenarios, understand how repayment types compare over time, and save their inputs for later without re‑keying details. They do not expect perfect foresight; they do expect transparency.
- Second, applicants want the sequence to make sense. Many prefer a genuine pre‑approval that does not force a property link on day one, clearly stating how long it holds, what conditions apply, and what could change. A property can then anchor the final decision when the buyer is ready. This ordering reduces emotional whiplash and helps people shop within a realistic band.
- Third, customers want the journey itself to be more clear. A concise, written roadmap at the outset outlining what will happen, in what order, who is responsible, and which documents are needed would reduce stress and reliance on hearsay. They want communication that defaults to email for clarity and record‑keeping, with calls used to resolve time‑sensitive or complex issues. When conversations do happen by phone, a short-written recap gives everyone the same reference point.
- Fourth, people want to submit information once and see it flow. Wherever possible, they prefer secure, consent‑based retrieval of statements rather than a parade of PDFs, and they appreciate a single place to upload and track documents, with examples that show what “good” looks like. When banks ask for additional proof (whether a residency permit, a diploma tied to a guarantee, or confirmation that funds are a gift) customers want links to the official source and a short note on why the item matters. The goal is not to avoid scrutiny but to avoid guesswork.
- Finally, once the loan is live, customers want to stay informed without making a hobby of it. When Euribor resets, they want a timely message that shows exactly how next month’s payment will change and when. Periodic, easy‑to‑scan updates that show principal repaid, interest paid year‑to‑date, and progress toward key milestones would reinforce a sense of control. When market conditions make it sensible to review terms, borrowers want a simple way to gauge potential benefits and costs before they commit energy to a deeper conversation. They are not asking for advice that replaces personal judgment; they are asking for clarity that helps them decide when a closer look is worth their time.
The future of mortgage journey
The mortgage end‑to‑end journey contains several friction points for customers, and the most persistent of these is the uncertainty that surrounds the process itself. Borrowers often begin their journey with uneven knowledge about the steps involved, the sequence in which they unfold, the documents that will be required, and the time these steps take. Another major pain point is the heavy documentation burden. Borrowers must gather statements from multiple accounts, secure proofs of income and residency, retrieve certificates, coordinate with sellers and appraisers, and respond to additional requests that often arrive unexpectedly. These two issues (lack of clarity and document‑heavy friction) might be where the next stage of mortgage innovation is emerging. The most promising direction is the rise of agentic AI, a new generation of AI systems designed not just to answer questions but to act on behalf of the customer.
In the mortgage space, several real‑world examples already point to what this future might look like. In the United States, NEXA Mortgage2 has begun implementing agentic AI to remove manual tasks and provide real‑time customer updates. Others, like Lendi Group in Australia and Metro Bank in the UK provide agentic AI assistant that helps borrowers monitor changing conditions and effortlessly search for suitable deals and to streamline interactions and keep customers informed without requiring constant human intervention3.
These developments illustrate a future in which a customer could have a continuous companion throughout the mortgage journey. Think of it as an AI advisor that remains present from the moment someone starts exploring how much they can afford until long after the loan is approved. Such an advisor could explain the process step‑by‑step, proactively notify the customer about upcoming tasks, and clarify what is needed before any confusion sets in. Instead of waiting for the borrower to ask, the AI could anticipate questions by drawing on the lender’s process manuals and guidelines, offering 24/7 explanations in clear language. In moments of decision, it could compare options, illustrate implications, and provide reassurance without pressure. Providers such as Alpha7x are developing agentic systems that behave less like digital tools and more like digital colleagues. Their AI co‑pilot is built to plan steps, adapt to context, and execute tasks in complex mortgage processes with minimal human input. The company describes its agent as capable of understanding borrower profiles, handling workflow bottlenecks, and automating the sequence of interactions that currently require the combined effort of loan officers, underwriters, and processors4.
Agentic AI might remedy what is painful today. However, they would not replace the human relationship that many borrowers still value, especially during decisions with long‑term consequences. It would remove the friction that makes the process confusing and stressful today. In doing so, it could turn the mortgage journey from a fragmented set of tasks into something that feels more like a coordinated partnership from start to finish.