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Mortgage Rate Climbs to 6.55%, a Level Not Seen Since Last August

Published Jul 16, 2026
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Summary:
  • The average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage climbed to 6.55%, its highest level since August 2025.
  • Mortgage rates have risen by over 0.5 percentage points since the Middle East conflict began in late February 2026.
  • Pending home sales dropped 5.4% in June from May, and each of the four major U.S. regions saw a decline.

Another Geopolitical Shock Pushes Borrowing Costs Higher

Mortgage rates just hit a painful milestone. The culprit is not the usual inflation report or Fed meeting. It is geopolitics. A U.S.-Iran peace deal that had been brokered about a month ago fell apart, and tensions in the Middle East flared up again.

That renewed fears that inflation might stick around longer than expected, which sent Treasury yields higher. Mortgage rates tend to follow those yields around like a shadow.

Since the eruption of the Middle East conflict in late February 2026, rates have climbed by over 0.5 percentage points. That is a fast move by normal standards, and it shows how quickly global events can hit your monthly housing bill.

The Housing Market Feels the Squeeze

Higher rates are already changing the math for buyers and sellers. In June, home sellers outnumbered buyers by nearly 500,000, according to Redfin. That is a massive gap. At the same time, the median home sale price hit a new all-time high in June, which means the few people who can still afford to buy are paying top dollar.

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That kind of uniform decline suggests this is not just a local problem. It is a national shift.

Chen Zhao, head of economics research at Redfin, summed up the divide clearly. "There's a pool of higher-income buyers who are purchasing seven-figure homes," she said. "But a lot of first-time and average move-up buyers are priced out as mortgage rates stay near 6.5%, making monthly payments challenging."

In other words, if you have deep pockets, you are still in the game. If you are trying to buy your first home or trade up to something bigger, the door is getting harder to push open.

What This Means for Your Portfolio and Plans

For investors who own real estate directly or through funds, rising rates are a classic double-edged sword. Higher borrowing costs can slow price appreciation and make it harder to flip properties. But they also tend to reduce supply, since homeowners with low-rate mortgages are less willing to sell and give up that cheap financing. That can keep a floor under prices in desirable areas.

For anyone thinking about buying a home, the math has gotten worse quickly. Monthly payments on a typical loan are noticeably higher than they were just a few months ago. And with no clear end to the geopolitical uncertainty, rates could edge higher still. Market participants are watching closely to see whether further instability pushes yields up again.

The bottom line: mortgage rates are back near levels that have historically cooled the housing market. Whether you are buying, selling, or just watching from the sidelines, the next few weeks of headlines out of the Middle East could tell you a lot about where your housing costs are headed.

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