Image by PM Images/Getty Images; Illustration by Hunter Newton/Bankrate

Mortgage rates rose this week, with the 30-year fixed rate averaging 6.25%, up from 6.18% last week, according to Bankrate’s latest lender survey.

Current mortgage rates

Loan type Current 4 weeks ago One year ago 52-week average 52-week low
30-year 6.25% 6.30% 7.06% 6.61% 6.18%
15-year 5.53% 5.57% 6.29% 5.83% 5.49%
30-year jumbo 6.41% 6.49% 7.10% 6.68% 6.31%

The 30-year fixed mortgages in this week’s survey had an average total of 0.34 discount and origination points. Discount points are a way to lower your mortgage rate, while origination points are fees lenders charge to create, review and process your loan.

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Monthly mortgage payment at today’s rates

The national median family income for 2025 was $104,200, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the median price of an existing home 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, the monthly payment of $1,997 amounts to about 23% of the typical family’s monthly income.

“With more housing inventory coming online and home prices starting to level off, this remains a promising environment for those looking to buy or refinance,” says Samir Dedhia, CEO of One Real Mortgage.  

What will happen to mortgage rates in 2026?

On Jan. 9, President Donald Trump announced on his social media platform that he had directed mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to buy $200 billion in mortgage-backed securities. Mortgage rates, already at a 15-month low of 6.24% before Trump’s Truth Social post, fell to 6.18% in last week’s Bankrate survey. However, the dip proved temporary — 30-year rates moved back to 6.25% this week.

Sean Salter, a finance professor at Middle Tennessee State University, said a policy move such as Trump’s was good for only “a temporary and limited reduction in mortgage rates”: “Unless there is coordination with and support from monetary-policy actions via the Federal Reserve, and/or fiscal-policy actions from Congress, the effects of Trump’s announcement will likely not be highly impactful or long-lasting.”

Fannie and Freddie are the government-sponsored enterprises that back about two-thirds of U.S. home loans. Those mortgages are packaged as securities and sold to the Federal Reserve, pension funds and other institutional investors. So, while your home loan might be originated by a lender such as Rocket, loanDepot or Wells Fargo, or by an independent mortgage broker, it soon is turned into a mortgage bond owned by an investor. If the government steps in and buys additional bonds based on mortgages, the increased demand for home loans could lead to lower rates.

The consensus now is that mortgage rates will drift slightly lower. Fannie Mae’s January 2026 Housing Forecast predicts that rates will sit at 6% for most of 2026 and 2027.

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