Rates have now remained on hold for more than six years and the Bank is not expected to raise them until next year.
Analysts say the Bank is under no pressure to raise rates yet with inflation near record lows.
Inflation,
as measured by Consumer Prices Index, was all but flat at 0.1% in May.
That was up from -0.1% in April but well below the Bank's 2% target.
However,
in the Bank of England's inflation report in May, governor Mark Carney
warned that inflation was expected to pick up notably towards the end of
the year.
The half-dozen years of ultra-low interest rates have
cut returns on savings, but mortgage borrowers have benefited from lower
repayments.
Staying put?
The Bank also left its money-printing stimulus programme, known as Quantitative Easing (QE), unchanged at £375bn.
The
Bank's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) will reveal why it decided to
leave policy as it is when it publishes the minutes of its meeting on 22
July.
The minutes will also show if any of the nine-strong committee had any strong concerns about economic conditions.
Revised
official figures released last week showed the economy grew by 3% in
2014, revised up from an earlier estimate of 2.8%, and by 0.4% in the
first quarter of 2015, revised up from 0.3%.
However, the latest
forecast from the independent Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR)
revised its growth forecasts for 2015 down slightly to 2.4% from 2.5%.
Also on the growth front, recent figures have shown a pick up in pay rises, which are at their highest for almost four years.
Neither
statistic though is strong enough on its own when coupled with flat
inflation and continuing weak demand from the eurozone.
Chris
Williamson, from research firm Markit, said: "No statement was made but,
with inflation at just 0.1%, the Bank's inflation target of 2.0% is
clearly still a long way off and, with 'Grexit' concerns casting a dark
cloud of instability over the economic outlook, now is clearly not the
time for central banks to be causing further uncertainty. "
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