Current Mortgage Rate Trends
The table below shows general market rate information provided by a third party widget. These figures are not a commitment to lend and should not be interpreted as a locked rate quote.
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
For a real quote, we’ll price your scenario using your credit profile, down payment, occupancy, property type, and chosen loan program.
If two quotes look similar, the fees and structure often explain the difference. The document that standardizes those details is the Loan Estimate. See Loan Estimate explained.
If your goal is to lower payment, today’s rates may matter, but your loan structure matters just as much. A clean starting point is a rate and term refinance.
What Affects Your Mortgage Rate?
- Credit profile: Score, history, and overall strength of the file
- Down payment: Equity level and risk profile
- Loan program: Conventional, FHA, VA, USDA, Jumbo, ARM
- Occupancy: Primary residence vs second home vs investment
- Property type: Single family, condo, multi unit, etc.
- Rate structure: Fixed vs adjustable rate options
- Market conditions: Bond market moves and lender pricing changes
Many borrowers assume rates are only about credit score. That is not true. Program choice, occupancy, and fee structure matter too. If you want a quick reality check on common assumptions, read mortgage myths.
If you are trying to remove mortgage insurance, rate changes are only part of the decision. See refinance to remove PMI.
Refinance Options When Rates Move
When rates change, the best move depends on your goal: lower payment, change term, remove mortgage insurance, or access equity. Use the links below to match your scenario to the right strategy.
- Lower payment or change term: Rate and term refinance
- Access equity: Compare cash out refinance vs HELOC and confirm cash out refinance requirements
- Second lien options: HELOC vs home equity loan
- Closing costs and break even: Refinance closing costs
- Timing rules: How soon can I refinance
- FHA streamline option: FHA streamline refinance
- VA streamline option: VA IRRRL
If you are unsure which direction to go, start with when refinancing makes sense.
Interest rates directly affect monthly payment, especially in the first few years of ownership. Comparing today’s payment against rent can help determine whether buying now or waiting makes more financial sense.
Use the Florida Rent vs Buy CalculatorHow to Shop Mortgage Rates the Right Way
Comparing rates is smart, but it needs to be apples to apples. The same borrower can see different results depending on points, lender fees, lock period, and program structure. Many borrowers work with a mortgage broker to compare offers across lenders and understand the true cost beyond the headline rate.
- Compare the full costs: Rate plus points and lender fees
- Use the same loan terms: Same program, term length, and lock period
- Confirm assumptions: Credit score range, down payment, occupancy, and property type
- Ask about strategy: Paying points vs keeping cash, and refinance plans
The cleanest way to compare is to review each lender’s Loan Estimate side by side and look at rate, points, origination charges, and cash to close. See Loan Estimate explained.
Get a Personalized Mortgage Rate Quote
Tell us your goals and we’ll recommend the best loan program options, then price your specific scenario. You’ll get clear next steps and a simple plan.
If you are rate shopping, do not rely on screenshots or verbal numbers. Ask for the Loan Estimate so you can compare offers cleanly. See Loan Estimate explained.
If refinancing is part of your plan, use the refinance guides to match strategy to your goal: rate and term, cash out vs HELOC, and closing costs.
Disclosure: Rates shown (if any) are for general informational purposes and are not a commitment to lend or a locked rate quote. Actual rates, fees, and monthly payments vary based on credit, income, assets, occupancy, property type, loan amount, and underwriting. Programs and pricing are subject to change.
NMLS: 80777
Licensed mortgage broker in Missouri, Kansas, and Louisiana.
Recent Comments