logo
Mortgage and refinance interest rates today, June 26, 2025: Holding mostly steady

Mortgage and refinance interest rates today, June 26, 2025: Holding mostly steady

Yahoo26-06-2025
Today, mortgage interest rates were mostly unchanged. According to Zillow, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate dipped two basis points to 6.60%. The 15-year fixed rate was unchanged at 5.85%.
Bond markets churned on Wednesday; however, the 10-year Treasury yield, a mile marker for mortgage rates, ended the day basically unchanged. The Federal Reserve is sticking to its story of waiting until fall for lower interest rates, while bond traders are betting on a rate break before the end of summer. The push and pull on yields was basically a tie yesterday.
Dig deeper: What the latest CPI report means for mortgage rates
Here are the current mortgage rates, according to the latest Zillow data:
30-year fixed: 6.60%
20-year fixed: 6.17%
15-year fixed: 5.85%
5/1 ARM: 6.90%
7/1 ARM: 6.84%
30-year VA: 6.18%
15-year VA: 5.62%
5/1 VA: 6.37%
Remember, these are the national averages and rounded to the nearest hundredth.
Learn more: How to get the lowest mortgage rate possible
Here are today's mortgage refinance interest rates, according to the latest Zillow data:
30-year fixed: 6.65%
20-year fixed: 6.34%
15-year fixed: 5.92%
5/1 ARM: 7.22%
7/1 ARM: 7.30%
30-year VA: 6.22%
15-year VA: 5.97%
5/1 VA: 6.27%
As with the purchase mortgage rates, these are national averages we've rounded to the nearest hundredth. Refinance rates can be higher than purchase mortgage rates, but that isn't always the case.
Use the mortgage calculator below to see how various mortgage rates will impact your monthly payments.
The free Yahoo Finance mortgage payment calculator goes even deeper by including factors like homeowners insurance and property taxes in your calculation. You can even add private mortgage insurance costs and HOA dues if they apply to you. These monthly expenses, along with your mortgage principal and interest rate, will give you a realistic idea of what your monthly payment could be.
A mortgage interest rate is a fee for borrowing money from your lender, expressed as a percentage. There are two basic types of mortgage rates: fixed and adjustable rates.
A fixed-rate mortgage locks in your rate for the entire life of your loan. For example, if you get a 30-year mortgage with a 6% interest rate, your rate will stay at 6% for the entire 30 years. (Unless you refinance or sell the home.)
An adjustable-rate mortgage keeps your rate the same for the first few years, then changes it periodically. Let's say you get a 5/1 ARM with an introductory rate of 6%. Your rate would be 6% for the first five years and then the rate would increase or decrease once per year for the last 25 years of your term. Whether your rate goes up or down depends on several factors, such as the economy and U.S. housing market.
At the beginning of your mortgage term, most of your monthly payment goes toward interest. As time passes, less of your payment goes toward interest, and more goes toward the mortgage principal or the amount you originally borrowed.
Dig deeper: Adjustable-rate vs. fixed-rate mortgage — Which should you choose?
Two categories determine mortgage rates: ones you can control and ones you cannot control.
What factors can you control? First, you can compare the best mortgage lenders to find the one that gives you the lowest rate and fees.
Second, lenders typically extend lower rates to people with higher credit scores, lower debt-to-income (DTI) ratios, and considerable down payments. If you can save more or pay down debt before securing a mortgage, a lender will probably give you a better interest rate.
What factors can you not control? In short, the economy.
The list of ways the economy impacts mortgage rates is long, but here are the basic details. If the economy — think employment rates, for example — is struggling, mortgage rates go down to encourage borrowing, which helps boost the economy. If the economy is strong, mortgage rates go up to temper spending.
With all other things being equal, mortgage refinance rates are usually a little higher than purchase rates. So don't be surprised if your refinance rate is higher than you may have expected.
Two of the most common mortgage terms are 30-year and 15-year fixed-rate mortgages. Both lock in your rate for the entire loan term.
A 30-year mortgage is popular because it has relatively low monthly payments. But it comes with a higher interest rate than shorter terms, and because you're accumulating interest for three decades, you'll pay a lot of interest in the long run.
A 15-year mortgage can be great because it has a lower rate than you'll get with longer terms, so you'll pay less in interest over the years. You'll also pay off your mortgage much faster. But your monthly payments will be higher because you're paying off the same loan amount in half the time.
Basically, 30-year mortgages are more affordable from month to month, while 15-year mortgages are cheaper in the long run.
According to 2024 Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) data, some of the banks with the lowest median mortgage rates are Bank of America and Citibank. However, it's a good idea to shop around for the best rate with not just banks, but also credit unions and companies specializing in mortgage lending.
Yes, 2.75% is a fantastic mortgage rate. You're unlikely to get a 2.75% rate in today's market unless you take on an assumable mortgage from a seller who locked in this rate in 2020 or 2021, when rates were at all-time lows.
According to Freddie Mac, the lowest-ever 30-year fixed mortgage rate was 2.65%. This was the national average in January 2021. It is extremely unlikely that rates will dip below 3% again anytime soon.
Some experts say it's worth refinancing when you can lock in a rate that's 2% less than your current mortgage rate. Others say 1% is the magic number. It all depends on what your financial goals are when refinancing and when your break-even point would be after paying refinance closing costs.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Noem's Spending Rule Causes Delays at Homeland Security Dept.
Noem's Spending Rule Causes Delays at Homeland Security Dept.

New York Times

timea few seconds ago

  • New York Times

Noem's Spending Rule Causes Delays at Homeland Security Dept.

The new rule came down from Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, in June — a decree that she would crack down on wasteful spending by personally approving any expense over $100,000. But Ms. Noem has been slow to sign off on new spending requests, including hundreds of projects that officials have deemed critical to protecting national security and advancing President Trump's immigration agenda, according to internal documents reviewed by The New York Times. As of July 30, the most recent date reflected in most of the documents, at least 530 spending requests were awaiting Ms. Noem's approval, while more than 1,500 other spending requests were awaiting review by lower-level officials before they could land on her desk, according to the documents. And while Ms. Noem said in a June memo that her reviews of the requests could take five days, in many cases they are taking weeks, the documents show. A Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman said that as of Monday, Ms. Noem did 'not have a single contract on her desk awaiting signature' — a statement that could not be independently verified. But what is clear, from documents and interviews with people briefed on the spending requests, is that the bottleneck in the approval process has halted some operations while threatening further disruptions across the sprawling department, which includes more than a dozen agencies and divisions focused on issues as varied as immigration enforcement, airport security and disaster response. At the Transportation Security Administration, for example, a contract for airport screening equipment that helps detect fake passports expired in early July while awaiting approval. A lapse in the contract 'increases the likelihood of bad actors boarding aircraft using fraudulent identification,' T.S.A. officials wrote in the internal documents. 'Failure to award this contract action will significantly impact TSA's ability to monitor and analyze vulnerabilities across the agency's field information systems. … The most affected system will be TSA's Credential Authentication Technology which checks passenger identification and Secure Flight vetting status. During an outage, Secure Flight data cannot be fed to the system, thereby requiring Transportation Security Officers to use less secure, manual methods for verifying passenger identification. This increases the likelihood of bad actors boarding aircraft using fraudulent identification and severely impacts passenger throughput at checkpoints.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

HPS-Led Group Nears Deal to Buy $2.2 Billion of Stuck LBO Debt
HPS-Led Group Nears Deal to Buy $2.2 Billion of Stuck LBO Debt

Bloomberg

timea few seconds ago

  • Bloomberg

HPS-Led Group Nears Deal to Buy $2.2 Billion of Stuck LBO Debt

HPS Investment Partners and a group of lenders, including Apollo Global Management Inc., are snapping up over $2.2 billion of buyout debt that had been stuck on bank balance sheets since the Trump Administration's tariff proposals disrupted markets earlier this year, according to people familiar with the matter. The financing, which was tied to a buyout by Canadian auto parts maker ABC Technologies Holdings Inc., includes a $1.6 billion private credit loan led by HPS as well as a $675 million last-out term loan, said the people, who requested anonymity to discuss private deliberations. Apollo, the sponsor for ABC Technologies, is set to take a portion of the last-out loan, they said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store