Some good news today: The slow but steady increase in mortgage rates many expected following the Federal Reserve's recent 0.25% bump in its benchmark rate has failed to materialize. After an across-the-board bump in rates yesterday, mortgages stayed the course on Thursday. In fact, the shorter-term rates actually eased a touch.
Homebuyers are still enjoying what are relatively inexpensive mortgage loans. Even adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs), which are often tied to the recently increased prime rate -- what banks charge their most creditworthy customers -- held steady.
Here are today's average mortgage rates across the U.S., along with where they stood a month ago.
Mortgage Type |
Mortgage Rates Today |
Mortgage Rates 1 month ago |
---|---|---|
30-year fixed jumbo |
4.54% |
4.48% |
30-year fixed |
4.01% |
3.99% |
15-year fixed |
3.18% |
3.13% |
30-year fixed refi |
4.02% |
4.01% |
15-year fixed refi |
3.19% |
3.18% |
5/1 ARM |
3.20% |
3.15% |
5/1 ARM refi |
3.30% |
3.32% |
Mortgage rates are undeniably attractive, but compared to last year, today's rates almost seem expensive. For some perspective, here are the average rates from a year ago:
Mortgage Type |
Mortgage Rates (National Average) March, 20016 |
---|---|
30-year fixed |
3.69% |
15-year fixed |
2.97% |
5/1 year ARM |
2.90% |
For homeowners looking into a home equity line of credit (HELOC) or equity loan, both rates inched up today. HELOC and equity loan rates are 5.20% and 5.29%, respectively. HELOC rates are still below last month's 5.26%, but home equity loans are above February's 5.26%.