
Mortgage rates have already dropped into the upper 5s twice this year. But after just a few days, they ticked back up into the low 6% range. If you saw that and thought, āGreat. I missed it,ā youāre not the only one.
A lot of buyers are treating the 5s like some kind of magic number. As if moving from 6.1% to 5.99% suddenly changes everything. And from a mindset perspective, it does feel different.
But hereās the part most people donāt actually run the math on.
The Payment Difference Isnāt What You Think
Letās say youāre looking at a $500,000 home loan. At 6.1%, generally speaking, your principal and interest payment is roughly $3,030 per month. At 5.9%, itās about $2,966 per month.
Thatās a difference of only $64 a month.
Not $300.
Not $500.
Sixty dollars.
Let that sink in for just a moment.
Yes, over time that $64 a month can add up. But itās far from the dramatic swing many buyers imagine when they say theyāre āwaiting for the 5s.ā
The psychological impact of seeing a 5 in front of your rate can feel big. The financial impact? It might be something you donāt even notice when itās all said and done.
Experts Arenāt Predicting a Big Drop
Another important piece to think about: most housing economists arenāt forecasting a long-term return to 5% territory anytime soon.
While rates will move up and down, likely hitting the high 5s here and there, the broader expectation is for mortgage rates to hover in the low 6% range this year, not stay in the 5ās or decline much more.
While it certainly could happen, the reality is, waiting for a deep drop may not deliver the payoff youāre hoping for, if youāre holding out
The Bigger Question to Ask
Instead of asking, āDid I miss the 5s?ā A better question is: āDoes todayās payment work for me?āĀ
If the monthly payment fits comfortably in your budget, and youāve found a home that meets your needs, the difference between 6.1% and 5.9% likely isnāt the deciding factor. It might be one of them, but it shouldnāt be everything.Ā
And remember, mortgage rates arenāt permanent. If they drop meaningfully later, refinancing is always an option. But you canāt refinance a home you didnāt buy.
Waiting Might Feel Safe, But It Isnāt Always Strategic
Itās natural to want the best possible rate. Everyone does. But sometimes buyers overestimate how much a rate in the high 5s will change things in todayās market.
Donāt miss the fact that rates have already come down. A year ago, they were in the 7s. Now? Theyāre hovering in the low 6s. And for a lot of people, that percentage point difference thatās already here is the real game changer.
If you paused your plans when rates were higher, now may be the right time to re-run your numbers. Not because rates are āperfect.ā But because the monthly payment math might work better than you think, even with rates in the low 6s.Ā
Before assuming youāve missed your moment, take another look at the numbers.
You may find it never disappeared.
Bottom Line
If youāve been sitting on the sidelines waiting for that magic five number for rates, that strategy may not pay off as much as youād expect.
Connect with an agent or lender so you can double check the math at your price point. You may realize payments are already within your range.