Image by PM Images/Getty Images; Illustration by Hunter Newton/Bankrate
Current mortgage rates
Loan type | Current | 4 weeks ago | One year ago | 52-week average | 52-week low |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
30-year | 6.30% | 6.62% | 6.31% | 6.80% | 6.20% |
15-year | 5.51% | 5.83% | 5.43% | 6.00% | 5.40% |
30-year jumbo | 6.31% | 6.64% | 6.36% | 6.81% | 6.36% |
The 30-year fixed mortgages in this week’s survey had an average total of 0.31 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 is $104,200, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the median price of an existing home sold in July 2025 was $422,400, according to the National Association of Realtors. Based on a 20 percent down payment and a 6.30 percent mortgage rate, the monthly payment of $2,080 amounts to 24 percent of the typical family’s monthly income.
“While lower rates will bring some buyers and sellers into the market, today’s cut will not be enough to break up the housing market logjamy,” says Lisa Sturtevant, chief economist at Bright MLS, a listing service in the Mid-Atlantic region. “We will need to see further drops in mortgage rates and much slower home price growth, or even home price declines, to make a dent in affordability.”
What will happen to mortgage rates in 2025?
Amid expectations that the Federal Reserve would cut interest rates this week, mortgage rates fell to their lowest level in nearly a year, dropping to 6.38 percent this week, according to Bankrate’s national survey of lenders. It’s the lowest level since early October of last year.
“Mortgage rates may stay relatively flat in the short term since markets had already priced in this cut,” says Bill Banfield, chief businss officer at Rocket Mortgage. “For consumers, it’s another signal that the cost of borrowing is gradually moving lower.”
While the Fed decided to leave the federal funds rate untouched for most of 2025, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell finally acted at the central bank’s Sept. 17 meeting. Friday’s tepid jobs report seemed to seal the deal — the central bank is poised to cut. Mortgage rates didn’t respond to the Fed’s three consecutive cuts last year, though — a reminder that fixed mortgage rates are not set directly by the Fed but by investor appetite, particularly for 10-year Treasury bonds. When there’s uncertainty in the market, investors buy Treasury bonds, which in turn drives yields — and, often, mortgage rates — downward.
Meanwhile, the U.S. economy seems to be back on track: The gross domestic product grew by an impressive 3 percent in the second quarter, the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis said last month. However, President Donald Trump’s tariff policies have been blamed for an increase in inflation, which moved up to 2.9 percent in August, making little progress toward the Fed’s inflation target of 2 percent. As of Wednesday afternoon, 10-year Treasury yields moved briefly below 4 percent, then returned above that threshold.
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