Mortgage rates are still refusing to “follow the Fed” in a straight line, even after the Federal Reserve’s December policy move. If you’re shopping for a home or debating a refinance, today’s numbers—and the reason they’re behaving this way—matter more than the headlines.
After the Fed cut its target range for the federal funds rate by 0.25 percentage point to 3.5%–3.75% on December 10, many borrowers expected mortgage rates to slide quickly. Instead, rates have stayed in a tight band in the low-6% range, and in some surveys they’ve even ticked higher week-over-week. [1]
Below is a December 17, 2025 roundup of the latest mortgage and refinance rate data, how it translates into real monthly payments (including a $700,000 mortgage), and why mortgage rates can move “the wrong way” even when the Fed is cutting.
Mortgage rates today, December 17, 2025: where 30-year, 15-year, and refi rates stand
Because rate trackers use different data sources and methodologies, you’ll see slightly different “national averages” depending on where you look. The key is the range—and the direction.
National averages (two widely-followed trackers)
Bankrate (rates as of the morning of Dec. 17):
- 30-year fixed (purchase): 6.26% interest rate / 6.33% APR
- 15-year fixed (purchase): 5.67% interest rate / 5.77% APR
- 30-year fixed refinance: 6.52% interest rate / 6.59% APR
- 15-year fixed refinance: 5.93% interest rate / 6.02% APR [2]
NerdWallet (APR-based national averages, sourced from Zillow data):
- 30-year fixed: 6.11% APR
- 15-year fixed: 5.53% APR
- 5-year ARM: 6.59% APR [3]
What Freddie Mac’s weekly survey says (context, not a real-time quote)
Freddie Mac’s widely-cited weekly Primary Mortgage Market Survey shows:
- 30-year fixed averaged 6.22% (week ending Dec. 11, 2025)
- 15-year fixed averaged 5.54% [4]
Why the differences?
- Bankrate publishes both interest rate and APR (APR typically runs higher because it includes certain costs). [5]
- NerdWallet’s headline numbers are APR-based national averages and note Zillow as a data source. [6]
- Freddie Mac is a weekly survey, designed to show the broader trend rather than intraday shifts. [7]
The Fed cut rates—so why didn’t mortgage rates drop immediately?
The most important concept for homeowners and buyers right now is simple:
The Fed controls a short-term rate. Mortgage rates are long-term rates.
On December 10, the Fed lowered its benchmark range to 3.5%–3.75%. [8]
But mortgage rates are influenced more by:
- U.S. Treasury yields (especially the 10-year)
- inflation expectations
- investor demand for mortgage-backed securities (MBS)
- lender competition and risk pricing
Reuters put it bluntly after the December Fed cut: don’t expect mortgage rates to fall “in lockstep” because mortgage rates tend to follow Treasury yields and inflation expectations, meaning cuts may take time to filter through (and not overnight). [9]
Bankrate’s own daily rate coverage echoes the same dynamic: mortgage rates tend to track 10-year Treasury rates, and what happens next depends not only on the Fed, but on inflation and the overall strength (or weakness) of the economy. [10]
In other words: the Fed’s move matters—but it’s not a remote control for 30-year fixed mortgages.
What a $700,000 mortgage costs per month right now (and why small rate moves still sting)
For buyers in high-cost markets, the number that hits hardest isn’t the Fed statement—it’s the monthly payment.
The CBS benchmark: payments after the December Fed cut
CBS recently ran the math using average rates around mid-December:
- 30-year at 6.12%: $4,251.01 per month
- 15-year at 5.50%: $5,719.58 per month
(Principal and interest only—excluding taxes, insurance, and PMI.) [11]
CBS also showed how much higher payments were earlier in the year, using January 2025 average rates:
- 30-year at 7.04%: $4,675.94 per month
- 15-year at 6.27%: $6,009.59 per month [12]
What those payments look like using today’s averages (Dec. 17)
Using Bankrate’s 6.26% 30-year fixed purchase average as a reference point, a $700,000 loan works out to about $4,315/month in principal and interest. (That’s a calculation based on the published average rate—your offer will vary.) [13]
At Bankrate’s 6.33% APR reference level, the payment estimate nudges higher (APR isn’t always the right input for payment math, but it signals higher all-in borrowing costs). [14]
The down payment reality check
CBS notes that many people won’t borrow the full $700,000—if you put 20% down ($140,000) on a $700,000 home, you’re financing $560,000, which reduces the payment meaningfully. [15]
Even with rates in the low 6% range, price level is doing a lot of the damage. That’s why rate “improvements” can feel underwhelming: a quarter-point in rate helps, but it doesn’t undo a high purchase price.
Refinance rates today: still higher than purchase rates in many cases
Refinancing is back in the conversation because rates have eased from earlier highs—but today’s refi quotes are still not “cheap” by recent historical standards.
Bankrate’s Dec. 17 snapshot puts national average refinance pricing around:
- 30-year fixed refi: 6.52% interest rate / 6.59% APR
- 15-year fixed refi: 5.93% interest rate / 6.02% APR [16]
Who can refinancing help right now?
A refinance tends to pencil out best when at least one of these is true:
- You’re replacing a mortgage rate that’s meaningfully higher (many households locked in 6.8%–7%+ loans earlier).
- You can shorten the term (30 → 20 or 15) without stressing your budget.
- You’re removing monthly mortgage insurance (PMI) or moving to a better loan structure.
- You’re doing a cost-controlled refinance with a clear break-even timeline.
If you’re only shaving a few tenths of a percent off your rate, closing costs can erase the gain—especially if you plan to move within a few years.
When will mortgage rates go down? What today’s forecasts suggest for 2026
The honest answer: mortgage rates can drift lower in 2026—but there’s no guarantee of a fast drop, and the path will likely be bumpy.
A Reuters poll of property experts published in December projected:
- The 30-year mortgage rate averaging about 6.18% in 2026
- And 5.88% in 2027
- With U.S. home prices rising modestly (about 1.4% in 2026) [17]
That’s a “slow improvement” outlook—not a return to the ultra-low mortgage era.
And the Fed itself is clear that what comes next depends on incoming data and risks, not a preset schedule. [18]
What to do now: a practical checklist for buyers and refinancers
If you’re buying in the next 30–90 days
- Shop multiple lenders (rate + fees matter).
- Compare interest rate vs APR so you don’t get tricked by points-heavy quotes. [19]
- Consider a rate lock once you’re under contract.
- Ask about a float-down option (a feature that may allow a lower rate if the market improves before closing). CBS highlights float-downs as one way to avoid “waiting” while still protecting yourself if rates fall. [20]
If you’re considering refinancing
- Pull your current note rate and remaining term.
- Get quotes for:
- a new 30-year (payment-focused),
- a 20-year,
- and a 15-year (interest-savings-focused).
- Do a break-even check: (closing costs) ÷ (monthly savings).
- If your lender offers it, ask whether a lock includes a float-down feature—Bankrate specifically suggests asking whether you can take a lower rate after you lock (and what it costs). [21]
Bottom line for December 17, 2025
Mortgage rates are near the low end of their 2025 range, but they’re still high enough to keep affordability tight—especially for jumbo-sized loan amounts.
- Today’s averages: low 6% for purchase, mid-6% for many refinances. [22]
- A $700,000 mortgage still typically means $4,000+ per month in principal and interest at today’s rates. [23]
- The Fed’s cut helps over time, but mortgage rates don’t move in lockstep with Fed decisions. [24]
References
1. www.federalreserve.gov, 2. www.bankrate.com, 3. www.nerdwallet.com, 4. www.freddiemac.com, 5. www.bankrate.com, 6. www.nerdwallet.com, 7. www.freddiemac.com, 8. www.federalreserve.gov, 9. www.reuters.com, 10. www.bankrate.com, 11. www.cbsnews.com, 12. www.cbsnews.com, 13. www.bankrate.com, 14. www.bankrate.com, 15. www.cbsnews.com, 16. www.bankrate.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.federalreserve.gov, 19. www.bankrate.com, 20. www.cbsnews.com, 21. www.bankrate.com, 22. www.bankrate.com, 23. www.cbsnews.com, 24. www.reuters.com


