WASHINGTON, March 19, 2026, 3:10 PM EDT
The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage in the U.S. climbed to 6.22% this week—marking its highest point since early December—driven by a jump in Treasury yields that filtered into consumer borrowing. Last week, Freddie Mac had the rate at 6.11%. A year ago, it stood at 6.67%. For borrowers opting for a 15-year fixed, the average ticked up to 5.54%, compared with 5.50% last week. Freddie Mac
This shift comes right as the spring selling season gets underway, but the housing market isn’t showing much strength. In January, new U.S. single-family home sales dropped 17.6% to a 587,000 annual rate—the slowest since October 2022. Reuters noted that higher mortgage rates may hold back any bounce and leave inventories elevated. Reuters
Mortgage borrowers are feeling the pinch. The Mortgage Bankers Association reported a 10.9% drop in total mortgage applications for the week ending March 13. Refinancing took the bigger hit, down 19% from the week before, while purchase applications edged up 1%. “Rates continued to move higher,” said Joel Kan, vice president and deputy chief economist at the group, after rising Treasury yields pushed the average 30-year rate for conforming loans up to 6.3%—the highest mark since December 2025. MBA Newslink
Mortgage rates don’t move in step with the Fed’s decisions. Instead, they usually shadow the 10-year Treasury yield—the key barometer for U.S. government debt returns. That’s why the spotlight was on inflation signals rather than Wednesday’s Fed announcement. The central bank left its main rate unchanged at 3.50%-3.75%. Updated projections now put the median 2026 PCE inflation at 2.7%, up from 2.4% seen in December. Reuters
Fed Chair Jerome Powell said at his press conference that “higher energy prices will push up overall inflation” in the near term, but he cautioned it’s still too early to gauge the size or duration of the impact. Mike Dickson, who leads research and quantitative strategies at Horizon Investments, described the situation as “a real inflation risk”—a concern that’s already rippled through rates markets. Federal Reserve
Housing stocks got hit along with the rate shift: Lennar dropped close to 2.5% by the afternoon, PulteGroup lost around 0.9%, and D.R. Horton edged lower by 0.6%. The broader U.S. market was also in the red, as investors worried that a jump in oil prices might keep rates higher for an extended stretch. Reuters
Freddie Mac and the MBA track mortgage rates differently, but the latest readings line up: both signal that the drop in borrowing costs earlier this year has hit a wall. Freddie Mac’s survey averages rates from Thursday through Wednesday, while the MBA looks at rates on new applications. Right now, neither is showing further relief for borrowers. Freddie Mac
So buyers and builders are caught between two outcomes. Should oil prices ease off and Treasury yields pull back, mortgage rates might flatten out. But if energy costs remain elevated and inflation refuses to budge, higher home-loan rates could stick around, threatening to sap more life from a spring housing market already on the ropes. Federal Reserve