The 3% Mortgage is Fading Fast

AUSTIN – (By Dale King, Realty News Report) – A new Realtor.com analysis of outstanding mortgage data has revealed a significant new statistic involving folks who have borrowed money to purchase a home.

The web site report says the current share of U.S. homeowners paying mortgage rates above 6% has officially surpassed the number of homeowners still hanging on to their extremely low, sub-3% payment rates – leftovers from the pandemic homebuying surge.

“This crossover reflects a gradual resetting as some households trade in low-rate mortgages for higher-rate loans or enter the market for the first time, even as rate ‘lock-in’ continues to hinder the pace of inventory recovery,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist at Realtor.com.

The mortgage stats collected by Realtor.com say that during the third quarter of 2025, 21.2% of outstanding mortgages carried interest rates of 6% or higher, nudging past the 20.0% share of households with rates below 3%.

Once unheard of in contemporary housing history, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate fell below 3% in July 2020 – at the height of the COVID epidemic — and largely remained there through September 2021 — the only period since data collection began in 1971 when rates dipped that low.

Mortgage Rates as of Jan. 29, 2026

The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.1% as of January 29, 2026.  A year ago at this time, the 30-year FRM averaged 6.95%, according to the Freddie Mac survey released Thursday.

“Mortgage rates remain near their lowest levels in three years, which is encouraging for potential homebuyers who have waited to enter the market for some time,” said Sam Khater, Freddie Mac’s Chief Economist. “Lower rates, combined with strong income growth, have led to a steady increase in purchase applications compared to last year. We’re also seeing more homeowners refinancing their mortgages to benefit from these lower rates, as shown by the rise in refinance applications over the past year.”

Mortgage rates soared post-pandemic. And while they have eased from their peak of 7.04% in January 2025 — settling into the low 6% range by year’s end — they have stayed above 6% since September 2022. This continues to hinder the activity of potential homeowners, home buying affordability and housing supply.

Charting current mortgage rates

Currently, nearly a third of outstanding mortgages (31.5%) carry interest rates between 3% and 4%. Some 17.1% are in the 4%–5% range, 10.2% land between 5% and 6% and 21.2% register 6% or higher.

Of note here is the fact that roughly 80% of all outstanding mortgages continue to carry rates below 6%, indicating that rate “lock-in” – the situation that stops low-rate mortgage holders from purchasing a new home at a higher finance amount — remains a challenge.

Still, the fact that mortgages above 6% outnumber those below 3% marks an important turning point — one that suggests a slowly loosening grip of the ultra-low-rate era on today’s housing market, Realtor.com says. It suggests that increased market movement is coming as more households either trade in low-rate mortgages for higher-rate loans or jump into the homeowner market for the first time.

Housing supply is up

Housing supply has improved over the past year, tipping the national market into “balanced” territory, and some local regions into the “buyer’s market” area. Scarce inventory has kept pressure on home prices to remain in the high range, especially in affordable areas where homes sell quickly and buyers face extensive competition.

As noted above, in the third quarter of 2025, 20% of outstanding mortgages had an interest rate below 3%. Between the second and third quarters, nearly all shifts in mortgage rate share occurred within the sub-4% brackets. Hale said this may reflect “swappers,” or borrowers exchanging a lower-rate mortgage for a higher-rate one.

The shrinking share of low-rate mortgages, the report adds, could also reflect buyers paying off their mortgages and owning outright. In Q3, the total number of mortgage loans fell both quarter over quarter and year over year, indicating that some loans were paid off, not swapped.

In addition, more builders have been offering rate buydowns and other incentives, which could be boosting the number of mortgages in the 4% to 6% range and helping to keep those shares stable. Overall, this activity resulted in a 0.9-percentage-point increase in the share of mortgages with rates above 6%.

Several forces at work

The increase in mortgages with rates above 5% likely reflects several dynamics. Some households that delayed moving until mortgage rates dropped a bit may have decided to act as finance rates softened, despite still-elevated borrowing costs. Also, with the typical rate in the low-6% range, some buyers were likely able to lock in or refinance below 6%, boosting the 5%–6% share.

Altogether, this means that more than half (51.5%) of outstanding mortgages still have a rate of 4% or lower, and roughly 69% have a rate of 5% or lower.

The share of homeowners holding a mortgage with a rate of 6% or higher increased more than 4 percentage points between the third quarter of 2024 and the third quarter of 2025 as buyer activity persevered despite high rates.

Even in today’s high-price, high-rate market, home buying activity surrounding major life events (i.e., kids, marriage, divorce, etc.) keeps the market in motion.

Though the “lock-in effect” continues to impede the home purchasing field, Realtor.com says a recent survey indicated that 40% of potential buyers would find a home purchase feasible if mortgage rates were to drop below 6%, and 32% of buyers would be willing to take a home purchase leap if rates dropped below 5%.

The report says easing inflation and mortgage rates will be key drivers of seller activity which will relieve some price pressure and competition in today’s undersupplied market.

Jan. 29, 2026 Realty News Report Copyright 2026

Photo credit: Ralph Bivins, Realty News Report, Copyright 2026

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