Key Takeaways
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- 54% of US mortgage holders have rates at or below 4%, creating a powerful incentive to stay put.
- Mortgage rates near 6.2% are still too high to unlock meaningful housing supply.
- Housing inventory and existing-home sales remain near 30-year lows, despite modest recent improvements.
- Affordability pressures from prices, taxes, and insurance compound the rate lock-in problem.
What Happened?
Mortgage rates have declined to their lowest level in a year following Federal Reserve rate cuts, but the drop hasn’t meaningfully revived housing turnover. Nearly 30 million US households refinanced or bought homes during 2020–2021 at rates near 3% or lower and are unwilling to trade those loans for today’s much higher borrowing costs. As a result, many homeowners who might otherwise move are choosing to stay put, freezing housing supply for a third consecutive year.
Why It Matters?
The lock-in effect has become a structural constraint on the US housing market. Even with rates easing, the gap between existing mortgage payments and today’s costs remains too wide to justify selling for most owners. This keeps inventory artificially low, supports elevated home prices, and limits transaction volumes — hurting real estate turnover, construction demand, and housing-related economic activity. For investors, it signals that rate cuts alone won’t normalize housing; affordability and income growth will matter more.
What’s Next?
Economists don’t expect mortgage rates to fall enough in the near term to unlock large-scale selling, with forecasts pointing to average 30-year rates around 6.4% in 2026. Incremental improvements in inventory and buyer activity may continue, especially in regions where prices are easing, but a full recovery likely depends on years of wage growth catching up to housing costs. Until then, housing supply is likely to remain constrained — and mobility limited.














