Image courtesy: PM Images/Getty Images;Illustration: Hunter Newton/Bankrate
current mortgage interest rate
| Loan type | the current | 4 weeks ago | 1 year ago | 52 week average | 52 week low |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30 years | 6.25% | 6.30% | 7.06% | 6.61% | 6.18% |
| 15 years | 5.53% | 5.57% | 6.29% | 5.83% | 5.49% |
| 30 year jumbo | 6.41% | 6.49% | 7.10% | 6.68% | 6.31% |
The average total of discount points and origination points for 30-year fixed mortgages in this week’s study was 0.34 points. Discount points are a way to lower your mortgage interest rate, and starting points are fees charged by lenders to originate, qualify, and process your loan.
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Monthly mortgage payment at current interest rate
According to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, the national median household income in 2025 was $104,200, and the median price of existing homes sold in December 2025 was $405,400, according to the National Association of Realtors. Based on a 20% down payment and a 6.25% mortgage rate, a monthly payment of $1,997 is approximately 23% of a typical household’s monthly income.
“With more home inventory available online and home prices starting to level off, it remains a promising environment for those looking to buy or refinance,” said Sameer Dedia, CEO of One Real Mortgage.
What will mortgage interest rates be in 2026?
On January 9, President Donald Trump announced on his social media platforms that he had directed mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to purchase $200 billion worth of mortgage-backed securities. Mortgage rates were already at a 15-month low of 6.24% before President Trump’s “Social Truth” post, but fell to 6.18% in Bankrate’s survey last week. However, this decline proved to be temporary, with 30-year rates returning to 6.25% this week.
Sean Salter, a finance professor at Middle Tennessee State University, said policy actions like President Trump’s would only have the effect of “temporarily and limitedly lowering mortgage rates.” “Unless there is coordination and support from monetary policy action through the Federal Reserve and fiscal policy action from Congress, the effects of President Trump’s announcements are unlikely to be significant or long-lasting.”
Fannie & Freddie is a government-backed company that backs about two-thirds of U.S. home loans. These mortgages are packaged as securities and sold to the Federal Reserve, pension funds, and other institutional investors. So even if a mortgage is originated by a lender like Rocket, loanDepot, Wells Fargo, or an independent mortgage broker, it immediately turns into a mortgage bond owned by the investor. If the government intervenes and purchases additional mortgage-based bonds, the increased demand for mortgages could lead to lower interest rates.
The consensus now is that mortgage rates will fall slightly. Fannie Mae’s January 2026 housing forecast projects interest rates to remain at 6% for most of 2026 and 2027.
