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Why Mortgage Rates Staying High Might Actually Be Good News for Your Next Home Purchase




If you’ve been waiting for mortgage rates to return to the record lows of 2020 and 2021 before buying a home, it may be time to reconsider. While lower rates seem appealing, those years of ultra-cheap borrowing actually made housing less accessible for most buyers. Hoping for another period of rock-bottom rates could mean missing out on the advantages of today’s market.
When mortgage rates stay too low for too long, homes do not become more affordable—they become harder to find. Scarcity, driven by excessive demand and limited supply, pushes prices up faster than the savings from a lower interest rate can offset.
How Low Rates Erased Inventory
During the pandemic, the Federal Reserve kept interest rates near zero to support the economy. Mortgage rates fell below 3%, triggering a wave of homebuying. At the same time, existing homeowners with low-rate mortgages had little incentive to sell and give up those favorable terms.
“When interest rates are too low for too long, housing becomes much more expensive,” says Jonathan Miller, President and CEO of Miller Samuel Inc., who has tracked housing markets for nearly four decades. “It seems counterintuitive, but inventory gets wiped off the face of the earth.”
The supply of homes for sale builds slowly under normal conditions. When rates plunge, however, buyers rush in and quickly absorb available inventory. Sellers hold off on listing, not wanting to lose their low payments. The result is a market overwhelmed by buyers and short on homes, leading to bidding wars, waived inspections, and rapidly rising prices.
The effects are still visible. In some suburban markets around New York City, 50 to 60 percent of homes sold above asking price during the pandemic surge. Today, that figure has dropped to 25-35 percent—still elevated, but indicating the market is gradually regaining balance as inventory recovers.
Why Prices Didn’t Fall as Rates Rose
Between 2022 and 2024, mortgage rates more than doubled, marking the fastest increase on record. Many expected this to trigger a drop in home prices. Instead, prices held steady or even climbed in many areas.
The main reason is that the supply of homes remained extremely limited. Homeowners who refinanced or bought during the pandemic at 3% rates have little motivation to move and take on a new loan at 6% or 7%. This “lock-in effect” kept listings low, sustaining competition among buyers for the relatively few homes available.
New construction has not filled the gap. Each year, newly built homes account for only about 10 to 15 percent of the available inventory, and most are priced at the higher end of the market. Entry-level homes—those most in demand by first-time buyers—remain scarce, as builders focus on more profitable, upscale projects.
What This Means for Buyers Now
Today’s higher mortgage rates come with an unexpected advantage: less frantic competition. Buyers now have more time to view properties, consider their options, and negotiate repairs or concessions—scenarios that were rare when rates were at their lowest and bidding wars were the norm.
Buyers with strong credit and higher incomes may also be eligible for specialized financing. Some wealth managers and relationship bankers offer mortgage products with rates in the low 5% range, well below the national average of 6.4%. These options are not widely advertised, so it’s worth asking about alternatives that could lower your borrowing costs.
For sellers, the current market requires realistic pricing. With more homes for sale than during the pandemic peak and buyers showing increased caution, overpricing can leave a listing unsold for weeks. Buyers are more informed and less willing to pay above-market prices for properties that linger on the market.
Looking Ahead: A Stabilizing Market
The housing market is still adjusting to the changes brought on by pandemic-era policies. Most analysts expect mortgage rates to decline gradually over the next two years, but few predict a return to sub-6% rates before 2027. This slower pace of change is likely to help the market find stability.
“I hope rates don’t come anywhere near the lows we saw during the pandemic,” Miller says. “That’ll just create more distortion in the future.”
Sharp swings in rates make buyers hesitant and disrupt regular market activity. A more stable environment, even with moderately higher rates, gives both buyers and sellers greater confidence to make decisions.
If you’ve been waiting for the “perfect” rate to buy a home, it’s worth considering what actually makes a purchase successful. A slightly higher rate may be a fair trade-off for the chance to buy without competing against dozens of other offers or waiving essential protections.
In the current market, the real advantage may come from less competition, more negotiating power, and a more predictable process. For many buyers, that combination is worth far more than the difference in a monthly payment.
This article provides insights into housing trends and mortgage rates. It is not financial or legal advice.
This article was sourced from a live expert interview.
Every month we conduct hundreds of interviews with
active market practitioners - thousands to date.
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