Mortgage rates ease slightly after two weeks of increases
Rates edged lower this week after rising the previous two weeks, with the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate dipping to 6.36% and the 15-year fixed rate easing to 5.71%, according to Freddie Mac. The slight decline may help some buyers revisit affordability calculations heading into the summer market.
After climbing the previous two weeks, mortgage rates edged slightly lower this week, offering a modest but potentially useful shift for buyers and Realtors® heading into the summer market.
- The average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage dipped to 6.36% from 6.37% last week, according to mortgage buyer Freddie Mac. One year ago, the benchmark rate averaged 6.81%.
- Rates on 15-year fixed mortgages, which are commonly used for refinancing, also edged down to 5.71% from 5.72% the previous week. A year ago, those loans averaged 5.92%.
While the decline was small, Realtors may still find opportunities in the shift, particularly among buyers who paused searches or adjusted budgets as borrowing costs fluctuated earlier this year.
Even fractional changes in mortgage rates can alter monthly payments and purchasing power. That may help some buyers revisit price ranges they previously ruled out or restart conversations with lenders.
For Realtors, the rate movement can also serve as a natural touchpoint with prospective buyers and sellers who have been waiting for signs that borrowing costs are stabilizing.
The easing in 15-year mortgage rates may also create openings for conversations with existing homeowners considering refinancing or move-up purchases.
Mortgage rates are shaped by several factors, including Federal Reserve policy expectations, inflation trends and bond market activity. Economists continue watching incoming economic data closely as markets look for signals about the direction of rates through the remainder of 2026.
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