The weekly rate ticked down. The outlook didn't budge.
The 30-year fixed rate fell to 6.37% this week from 6.46%, per Freddie Mac. That's a small win for buyers shopping now.
But the MBA says the bigger picture hasn't changed - rates are likely stuck between 6% and 6.5% for a while.
Why Rates Won't Fall Much
The Fed cut short-term rates, but mortgage rates didn't follow. That's because home loans are tied to the 10-year Treasury yield, not the Fed's rate.
And the 10-year is being held above 4% by two things that aren't going away: growing federal budget gaps and inflation that won't cool. The MBA says rates have "already bottomed out."
What It Means for Buyers
There will be small dips - like this week's drop from 6.46% to 6.37% - that open short windows to refinance. But waiting for 5% isn't a real plan, per most forecasters.
The consensus: rates stay between 6.0% and 6.3% in 2026. That's livable for some, but the crunch from the pandemic rate spike isn't going away.
What to Watch
The Iran war adds a new factor. High oil prices feed inflation, which pushes Treasury yields up, which pins mortgage rates higher. If oil stays above $100, that 6.1% forecast could end up being too rosy.
