The average rate offered to homebuyers using a conventional 15-year fixed mortgage rose to 2.94% from 2.91% the previous business day, marking the highest average we’ve seen since 2020. The average for a 30-year fixed mortgage rose to 3.81% from 3.79% the previous business day, moving closer to its recent peak of 3.85%.  Fixed mortgage rates tend to track the direction of 10-year Treasury yields, which usually rise with heightened inflation fears (and fall when those fears subside.) Yields have soared amid signals that the Federal Reserve will raise benchmark interest rates to control inflation at a four-decade high. Even at their recent peaks, mortgages are still pretty affordable by historic standards. According to a Freddie Mac measure that dates back farther than our data, 15-year and 30-year mortgages average only a little more than half a percentage point higher than the record lows reached last year. Three years ago, the average 30-year was almost 5% and at the start of the 1990s, around 10%. During the pandemic, these relatively low rates have bolstered buying power, allowing house hunters to buy more expensive homes with the same monthly budget and helping to fuel a fiercely competitive residential real estate boom that has only recently begun to cool slightly. For the same reasons, the uptick in rates over the past few months has discouraged borrowing, in particular refinancing activity.

30-Year Mortgage Rates Increase

A 30-year fixed mortgage is by far the most common type of mortgage because it offers a consistent and relatively low monthly payment. (Shorter-term fixed mortgages have higher payments because the borrowed money is paid back more quickly.)  Besides conventional 30-year mortgages, some are backed by the Federal Housing Authority or the Department of Veterans Affairs. FHA loans offer borrowers with lower credit scores or a smaller down payment a better deal than they might otherwise get; VA loans let current or past members of the military and their families skip a down payment.

30-year fixed: The average rate rose to 3.81%, up from 3.79% the previous business day. A week ago, it was 3.74%. For every $100,000 borrowed, monthly payments would cost about $466.53, or $3.98 more than a week ago.30-year fixed (FHA): The average rate rose to 3.68% from 3.64% the previous business day. A week ago, it was 3.59%. For every $100,000 borrowed, monthly payments would cost about $459.15, or $5.07 more than a week ago.30-year fixed (VA): The average rate rose to 3.74% from 3.73% the previous business day. A week ago, it was 3.65%. For every $100,000 borrowed, monthly payments will cost about $462.55, or $5.09 more than a week ago.

15-Year Mortgage Rate Rises 

The major advantage of a 15-year fixed mortgage is that it offers a lower interest rate than the 30-year and you’re paying off your loan more quickly, so your total borrowing costs are far lower. But for the same reason—that the loan is paid back over a shorter time frame—the monthly payments will be higher.

15-year fixed: The average rate rose to 2.94%, up from 2.91% the previous business day. A week ago, it was 2.76%. For every $100,000 borrowed, monthly payments would cost about $687.70, or $8.60 more than a week ago.

Jumbo Mortgage Rates Rise or Hold Steady

Jumbo loans, which allow you to borrow bigger amounts for more expensive properties, tend to have slightly higher interest rates than loans for more standard amounts. Jumbo means over the limit that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are willing to buy from lenders, and those limits are about to go up. In 2022, the limit for a single-family home will now be $647,200 (except in Hawaii, Alaska, and a few federally designated high-cost markets, where the limit is $970,800.)

Jumbo 30-year fixed: The average rate rose to 3.58% from 3.4% the previous business day. A week ago, it was 3.52%. For every $100,000 borrowed, monthly payments would cost about $453.52, or $3.36 more than a week ago.Jumbo 15-year fixed: The average rate was 3.27%, the same as the previous business day. A week ago, it was 3.4%. For every $100,000 borrowed, monthly payments would cost about $703.64, or $6.34 less than a week ago.

Refinance Rates Climb

Refinancing an existing mortgage tends to be slightly more expensive than getting a new one, especially in a low-rate environment. 

30-year fixed: The average rate to refinance rose to 3.93% from 3.91% the previous business day. A week ago, it was 3.86%. For every $100,000 borrowed, monthly payments would cost about $473.39, or $4.01 more than a week ago.15-year fixed: The average rate to refinance rose to 3.07% from 3.04% the previous business day. A week ago, it was 2.9%. For every $100,000 borrowed, monthly payments at that rate will cost about $693.95, or $8.17 more than a week ago.

Methodology

Our rates for “today” reflect national averages provided by more than 200 of the country’s top lenders one business day ago, and the “previous” is the rate provided the business day before that. Similarly, the week earlier references compare the data from five business days earlier (so bank holidays are excluded.) The rates assume a loan-to-value ratio of 80% and a borrower with a FICO credit score of 700 to 759—within the “good” to “very good” range. They’re representative of the rates customers would see in actual quotes from lenders, based on their qualifications, and may vary from advertised teaser rates. Have a question, comment, or story to share? You can reach Diccon at dhyatt@thebalance.com.