Roughly 72% of potential homebuyers say homeownership would be financially feasible if mortgage rates fell below 5%, according to a recent survey from Realtor.com. That means mortgage rates would need to drop by at least 2% to unlock today’s unaffordable housing market.
But there’s a problem. Major forecasts don’t call for mortgage rates to slip under 6% until 2025.
Between last November and early January, the average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage, the most popular home loan type, fell from a high of 8.01% to the mid-6% range, according to Bankrate, CNET’s sister site. However, throughout February, rates have gone up and kept steady at around 7.25%.
Though mortgage rates aren’t expected to fall dramatically this year, any dip is good news for homebuyers. If home loan rates manage to reach the low-6% range by the end of the year, it would increase housing affordability for a large number of families who have been stuck on the sidelines.
Will 6% be the magic mortgage rate to kick-start the housing market? Or will we need to wait for 5% rates a year from now? Here’s what experts are saying.
Mortgage rates: Rise like a rocket, fall like a feather?
The recent surge in mortgage rates was fueled by hotter-than-expected inflation and labor data, which sent the 10-year Treasury yield (a key benchmark for the 30-year fixed mortgage rate) higher. But in some ways, rates were just recalibrating to an appropriate level.
“Investors got a little ahead of themselves in terms of expectations for lower rates this year,” said Keith Gumbinger, vice president of mortgage site HSH.com. Given the state of the economy -- like sticky inflation and the Federal Reserve’s reactive monetary policy -- financial markets may have been overly optimistic in projecting when interest rate cuts would start.
After nearly two years of aggressive interest rate hikes to tame inflationary pressures, the Fed signaled in December it would likely cut rates three times in 2024. Though the Fed doesn’t directly set mortgage rates, a lower federal funds rate, combined with cooler inflation, would help mortgage rates go down.
Overall forecasts still project mortgage rates to decline, but exactly when and by how much is murkier. Before adjusting the federal funds rate, the central bank wants to see inflation steady at its 2% year-over-year target.
Even if economic data points to a slowdown, mortgage rate movement will likely be slow and gradual, so 5% rates aren’t in the cards this year.
Read more: Mortgage Predictions: How Labor Data Could Impact Mortgage Rates in 2024
Will mortgage rates go below 6% this year?
Mortgage rates tend to be volatile and preemptive. Rate movement depends not on what’s happening now, but on what investors and lenders believe will happen in the future, according to Orphe Divounguy, senior economist at Zillow Home Loans.
"Today’s mortgage rates, to some extent, already reflect expectations of slowing economic growth and future Fed rate cuts," Divounguy said.
While next month’s economic data could change the equation, expectations for mortgage rates haven’t changed much. Rates in the low-6% range are still possible in 2024, just not in time for the spring homebuying season.
What the experts are saying
“If we’ve learned anything over the past few years, it is that mortgage rates and other financial conditions can shift rapidly as conditions change. My base expectation is that mortgage rates will decline more gradually and not break below 6% in 2024.”
- Danielle Hale, chief economist at Realtor.com
“As the Federal Reserve holds interest rates steady before beginning to slowly cut rates in May, the spread on the 30-year fixed-rate loan and the 10-year Treasury bond will normalize, and mortgage rates gradually will fall. That said, forecasting mortgage rates is challenging, and near-term volatility is likely. While the rate will trend lower, there is uncertainty in the month-to-month movement in rates.”
- Matthew Walsh, housing economist at Moody’s Analytics
“A 6-8% range can be a possible outcome if inflation remains stickier and higher than expectations, and the Fed does not cut until much later than the second half of this year. If the soft landing scenario occurs, then we could see a range closer to 5-7% once the Fed starts to cut rates later in 2024.”
- Yelena Maleyev, senior economist at KPMG
“I don’t think present conditions change the overall forecast for mortgage or other interest rates all that much, but sustained higher economic growth or more persistent inflation would.”
- Keith Gumbinger, vice president of mortgage site HSH.com







