Homeowners faced a sticker shock at the end of 2025 as the average monthly mortgage payment topped $2,000 for the first time—a historic milestone reflecting the combined pressure of high home prices and elevated interest rates.
In the fourth quarter of last year, the average payment for existing mortgage holders climbed to $2,005, representing a striking 44% surge compared to 2021, according to the latest quarterly outstanding mortgage report from the Realtor.com® economic research team.
In other words, the typical homeowner saw their monthly mortgage payment jump by more than $600 in just three years, an eye-watering surge.
Realtor.com senior economic research analyst Hannah Jones points out that new mortgages crossed the $2,000 threshold in September 2022, highlighting how recently originated mortgages carry the full brunt of today’s higher home prices and rates.
“This means it is much more difficult for first-time homebuyers who are already stretched thin in terms of qualifying for a property that would suit their needs. In many cases, those with the ability are turning to family members as co-borrowers or as a source of gift funds in order to get deals done,” Sarah DeFlorio, vice president of mortgage banking at William Raveis Mortgage, tells Realtor.com. “Those without these resources are sadly being left behind and stuck in a rental cycle.”
‘Golden handcuffs’ are starting to slip
Meanwhile, between the third and the fourth quarters of 2025, the share of outstanding mortgages with a rate below 4% continued to decrease, while the 5%-to-6% and the 6%-plus shares both increased.
It may signal the gradual easing of the “lock-in effect” keeping homeowners in place who are unwilling to give up their historically low borrowing rates.
Specifically, 19.7% of mortgages had an interest rate below 3% in the fourth quarter, down from 20% in the third quarter. Meanwhile, outstanding mortgage debt carrying interest rates between 3% and 4% decreased from 31.5% to 30.9% quarter over quarter.
At the same time, the 5%-to-6% and the 6%-plus brackets both experienced modest growth, climbing to 10.6% and 21.9%, respectively.
Jones notes that the share of homeowners holding a mortgage with a rate 6% or higher increased nearly 4 percentage points year over year, signaling that buyer activity carried on despite elevated borrowing costs.
“Even in today’s high-price, high-rate market, homebuying activity around major life events, such as having kids, a job change, or a divorce, keeps the market in motion,” explains the analyst. “Easing inflation and mortgage rates will be key drivers of seller activity as well, which will relieve some of the price pressure and competition in today’s undersupplied market.”
Yet, the glacial pace of this shift reflects how stubborn the “lock-in effect” really is. It captures both “swappers,” or borrowers finally trading lower-rate mortgages for today’s higher ones, as well as homeowners paying off their mortgages and owning their properties outright.
Another market force at play is builders offering rate buydowns and other incentives to attract buyers, which Jones says may be helping prop up the 4%-to-6% range and keep those shares relatively stable.
Spring thaw meets geopolitical volatility
Overall, just over half of all outstanding mortgages (50.6%) still carry rates of 4% or lower, and roughly 78% have a rate below 6%. Those homeowners are often unwilling to budge because they are tethered to their rates below today’s mid-6% range, constraining inventory and putting upward pressure on home prices in undersupplied markets.
Despite these challenges, March indicators show resilience. Pending sales rose 3.9% year over year, and new listings surged 21.2% from February, suggesting that life events are finally forcing some homeowners to move.
However, mortgage rates, which dipped to nearly 6% in February, surged again last month due to the conflict in Iran roiling financial markets and stalling the seasonal rebound.
The question for the remainder of 2026 is whether the “lock-in effect” eases rapidly enough to lure a substantial number of sellers off the sidelines before another spring slips by.
“At this point, the decision to give up a low rate is typically driven by the reality that a space may no longer work for you, whether that means you need less, more, or a different location,” says DeFlorio. “Many people held on for as long as they could but have found that the situation is no longer tenable.”
The mortgage banking vice president is hopeful that if mortgage rates resume their downward trajectory and settle closer to the 5% range, there will be less resistance for existing homeowners to take on a new mortgage at a higher rate.
“People have grown tired of the wait-and-see approach, so serious buyers are ready to act when they find the right property and are less influenced by headlines,” adds DeFlorio. “The market remains busy, and although people are disappointed by the recent rate uptick, rates are still well below the peaks of the past few years. Smart buyers recognize this and are ready to roll when they find the right place at the right price.”