Mortgage rates slip into the fives, and the housing shortage clears its throat
United States – February 26, 2026 – Mortgage rates dipped below 6%, but without more homes and clearer rules, affordability becomes musical chairs.
I was posted up in a municipal library corner where the carpet has seen things and the zoning code sits like a haunted encyclopedia. On the table: a stapled packet from last night’s planning commission meeting, a coffee that tasted like budget season, and one number that makes America lean forward in its folding chair.
It is not a scandal. It is not a speech. It is a rate.
Freddie Mac: 30-year mortgage rate hits 5.98%, first sub-6% since 2022
Freddie Mac’s Primary Mortgage Market Survey puts the average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at 5.98% for the week ending Feb. 26, down from 6.01% a week earlier. A year ago it averaged 6.76%.
The 15-year fixed rate was 5.44%, up from 5.35% a week earlier, and down from 5.94% a year ago.
That 5.98% sounds tiny because it’s a decimal. In housing, decimals are boulders.
Movement is real. The consequences are messy.
The Associated Press notes this is the first time the average long-term mortgage rate has slipped below 6% since late 2022, arriving as the spring homebuying season ramps up. AP also points to the 10-year Treasury yield, a key guidepost for mortgage pricing, at about 4.02% midday Thursday, down from roughly 4.07% a week earlier.
Clean translation: borrowing got a bit cheaper. That can pull buyers off the sidelines, help some owners refinance, and thaw a market that’s been slogging since rates climbed off their pandemic-era lows.
But housing is not a toaster. You cannot two-day-ship inventory. When demand perks up faster than supply, you do not get affordability. You get a bidding war with better music.
The tradeoff: lower rates can revive hope, and revive prices
A lower monthly payment is not the same thing as a lower home price. People shop by payment. When rates dip, buying power rises, and in supply-constrained markets that power often becomes higher offers on the same limited set of listings.
AP quotes Bright MLS chief economist Lisa Sturtevant saying that if rates stay below 6%, buyers and sellers will start getting back into the market, and the spring season could turn very active. Plausible. Also a warning label.
Guardrails: do the boring local work, in daylight
- The Paine test: does a sub-6% moment expand liberty for ordinary people, or just expand leverage for whoever already has the keys?
- The Orwell check: listen for “emergency” and “stabilization” being used to justify shortcuts that would not survive a calm Tuesday.
If leaders want this to feel like relief instead of a starter pistol, the follow-up has to be unglamorous: permits, zoning, timelines, and infrastructure. Rates in the fives are a spark. They are not a plan.
Now that the rate has slipped under 6%, will we legalize enough housing to meet demand, or just fight over the same scarce keys with louder speeches?
Keep Me Marginally Informed