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Business Environment Profiles - United States

30-year conventional mortgage rate

Published: 06 November 2025

Key Metrics

30-year conventional mortgage rate

Total (2025)

7 %

Annualized Growth 2020-25

16.5 %

Definition of 30-year conventional mortgage rate

The 30-year fixed rate mortgage is the most-common type of loan for home purchases in the United States. The data for this report is sourced from Freddie Mac's Primary Mortgage Market Survey. The values presented in this report are annual figures, derived from equally weighted monthly averages.

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Recent Trends – 30-year conventional mortgage rate

Mortgage rates declined in 2025, reaching 6.7% as the Federal Reserve continued to lower interest rates in response to economic conditions. This environment for cuts was shaped by tempered bond yields and investor expectations, directly impacting mortgage rates because of their close alignment with fixed income instruments. The Federal Reserve monitored inflation closely during this time, refraining from aggressive rate reductions when year-over-year inflation remained above 2.0%, which prevented mortgage rates from retracting to pre-pandemic levels. As a result, rates remained relatively elevated compared to those prior to 2020, but the reduced pace of increases provided relief for borrowers throughout the year.

The mortgage rate environment between 2021 and 2025 was characterized by significant volatility driven by both pandemic-related disruptions and monetary policy responses. Rates remained historically low in 2021, averaging 2.96%, though variants such as Delta and Omicron led to ongoing uncertainty and a brief pause in their upward momentum. A combination of consumer and commercial spending rebound, rising wages, and supply chain constraints resulted in heightened inflation, compelling the Federal Reserve to implement a series of aggressive rate hikes throughout 2022. This rapid tightening cycle drove the mortgage rate sharply higher, jumping from 2.96% in 2021 to 5.33% in 2022 and then reaching 6.8% by 2025. Inflation expectations influenced the trajectory of rates over this period, with the Federal Reserve slowing the pace of interest rate increases in 2023 as inflationary pressures moderated. The Fed reduced rates by 2024, but mortgage rates continued to rise due to enduring fiscal concerns and a lack of robust investor demand for government securities, which kept yields and mortgage spreads elevated.

Additional macroeconomic trends affecting the period included volatile capital flows into fixed income markets and persistent concerns about the sustainability of U.S. fiscal policy, both of which contributed to the upward movement in mortgage rates. The interrelationship between monetary policy and government borrowing needs meant that even dovish central bank actions in late 2024 could not fully offset the impact of larger Treasury issuance and shifting investor sentiment. Mortgage rates broadly tracked broader trends in fixed income markets throughout the 2021-2025 period, responding not only to Federal Reserve actions but also to exogenous shocks such as the pandemic and evolving fiscal policy environments.

The pivot from an exceptionally accommodative monetary stance following the COVID-19 pandemic to a more restrictive environment defined the 2020 to 2025 period, in response to inflationary pressures and increased government borrowing. As a result, 30-year mortgage rates increased over the period, with the interplay of inflation, government debt, monetary policy, and investor preferences all contributing to rate movements. This resulted in it rising at CAGR 16.5% over the timeframe 2020 to 2025.

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5-Year Outlook – 30-year conventional mortgage rate

Mortgage rates are projected to decrease by 2.3% in 2026, reaching 6.5%, as bond yields are set t...

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