Fannie Mae expects rates to average 6.4% for the year. Wells Fargo projects a slight decline, with rates averaging around 6.3% by the end of the year. Goldman Sachs predicts rates will remain above 6% through 2025.
Freddie Mac: In their December outlook, Freddie Mac researchers said they believe mortgage rates will go down "very gradually" in 2025. The Mortgage Bankers Association: The MBA sees mortgage rates trending down throughout 2025. The group thinks rates could end 2025 at 6.40% and tick down to 6.30% in 2026.
Current Forecasts and Expert Opinions
The short answer is: It's highly unlikely we'll see mortgage rates drop back to 3% anytime soon. However, recent inflation numbers point to cooling of the pace of inflation.
Fed officials indicated they now expect to cut rates by just a half point in 2025, which would likely mean two rate cuts at their eight policy-setting meetings. That's down from predicting a full percentage point (or four quarter-point cuts) in their September projections.
Despite an overall reduction in borrowing costs over the past two years, the 30-year mortgage rate recently moved up from a little above 6% in September 2024 to closer to 7% in January 2025. That contrasts with longer term mortgage rates holding at historically low levels of between 2% and 3% for much of 2020 and 2021.
At its February 2024 meeting, the Reserve Bank Board decided to leave the cash rate target unchanged at 4.35 per cent. This decision supports progress of inflation to the midpoint of the 2–3 per cent target range within a reasonable timeframe and continued moderate growth in employment.
However, without a major downturn or global catastrophe, it's highly unlikely that mortgage rates will drop to their 2020-21 levels. In fact, many economists and housing market experts hope they don't. In the long term, mortgage rates may stabilize between 5.5% and 6%, which is a historically normal range.
The lowest average mortgage rates on record came about when the Federal Reserve lowered the federal funds rate in 2020 and 2021 in response to the pandemic. As a result, the weekly average 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage fell to 2.65%, while the average 15-year, fixed-rate mortgage sunk to 2.10%.
The losers
Bond-fund investors, borrowers, and certain industries feel the pinch as soon as rates move upward: Bond funds, which regularly buy and sell their underlying holdings, can experience losses in the net asset value in the short term due to the inverse relationship between rates and bond prices.
Over the past 12 months, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate has fluctuated between 6.5% and 7.5%. Most housing economists had expected mortgage rates to drop to 6% by the end of 2024, moving into the mid-5% range in 2025. But mortgage rates recently jumped back up toward 7%.
The Federal Reserve and interest rates
Some people expected a downturn in 2022 – and again in 2023 and 2024 – due to the Federal Reserve's hawkish interest-rate decisions. The Fed raised rates rapidly in 2022 and held them high throughout 2023 and much of 2024.
Projected Interest Rates in the Next Five Years
ING's interest rate predictions indicate that in 2024, rates will start at 4%, with subsequent cuts to 3.75% in the second quarter, 3.5% in the third, and 3.25% in the final quarter. In 2025, ING predicts a further decline to 3%.
Higher interest rates force consumers to cut back on spending. Banks toughen their standards as well, making fewer loans. Inevitably, this affects the bottom line of many businesses.
NAHB: Rates Will Average 6.36% in 2025 and 5.93% in 2026. The National Association of Home Builders expects the 30-year mortgage rate to decrease to around 6.5% by the end of 2024 and fall below 6% by the end of 2025, according to the group's latest outlook.
2021: The lowest 30-year mortgage rates ever
Rates plummeted in 2020 and 2021 in response to the Coronavirus pandemic. By July 2020, the 30-year fixed rate fell below 3% for the first time. And it kept falling to a new record low of just 2.65% in January 2021. The average mortgage rate for that year was 2.96%.
These actions resulted in historically low mortgage rates until early 2022, when the Fed began tightening its balance sheet and raising rates to combat inflation. What's the Highest Mortgage Rate in History? From 1971 to present, the highest average mortgage rate ever recorded was 18.63% in October 1981.
"While I'd love to say rates will drop below 6% in 2025, I think it's a moderate probability and not a certainty," says Steven Parangi, a licensed mortgage loan originator and owner of Alpine Mortgage Services.
Mortgage rates have tended to fall in response to recent recessions.
Mortgage rates dropped this week after four weeks of increases. Mortgage rates ticked down slightly this week, a tiny boon to buyers eager to make a move with newly listed homes coming to market.
Today's rates seem high compared with the recent 2% rates of the pandemic era. But experts say getting below 3% on a 30-year fixed mortgage is unlikely without a severe economic downturn.
The Fed last cut the fed funds rate by 25 basis points on Dec. 18, 2024, taking the target range to between 4.25% and 4.50%. The CME Group forecasts a 97.3% likelihood it will keep to that range after the January gathering. The odds of another 25-basis point cut, to between 4.0% and 4.25% are only 2.7%.
The current median projection among the central bank's top minds is that the federal funds rate will average 3.4% in 2025 and 2.9% in 2026, down 1% in the next year and 1.5% in the long run.