Nobody Knows Where Mortgage Rates Are Going Next Month and Here Is How to Buy Anyway
The Question That Makes Homebuying Feel Simpler Than It Is
If you knew exactly where mortgage rates would be next month buying a home would be easy. You would know precisely when to act, what payment to expect, and whether waiting another few weeks would save you money or cost you more. The decision would be straightforward.
The challenge is that nobody knows. Not economists. Not analysts. Not the Federal Reserve. And if May taught buyers anything it is that rates do not move in a straight line and the direction they move can change quickly and without warning.
What May Revealed About Rate Predictions
May delivered a clear and uncomfortable lesson to buyers who were watching rates and waiting for the right moment. One inflation report came in hotter than expected and rates moved higher in a matter of days. Weeks of gradual improvement disappeared in a single move and buyers who had been building their timing strategy around a specific rate number found themselves back where they started or worse.
This is not an unusual occurrence. This is how rate markets work and the buyers who consistently navigate this environment successfully are not the ones who predicted the movement correctly. They are the ones who stopped trying to predict it and started building a plan that works regardless of what rates do next.
What Preparation Actually Looks Like
As Dave Weston of the Dave Weston Group at Hallmark Home Mortgage explains the shift that produces better outcomes for buyers is moving from market prediction to personal preparation.
Buy based on what feels comfortable for you today. Not based on the rate you saw two weeks ago. Not based on the rate you are hoping to see two weeks from now. Based on what the current market produces and what fits within a budget that makes genuine financial sense for your situation right now.
Give yourself room in case rates change before you get under contract. A buffer of 0.25 to 0.50 percent above the current rate built into your budget numbers keeps the purchase workable even if rates move slightly in the wrong direction between now and closing. That cushion is what keeps you in control of the outcome rather than at the mercy of daily market fluctuations.
Explore every option available to lower your monthly payment rather than waiting for the market to do it for you. Rate locks that protect against upward movement after the contract is signed. Seller credits applied toward a buydown that reduces the rate temporarily or permanently. Financing structures that are optimized for your specific situation rather than defaulting to whatever is most standard.
The Goal Is Not Perfect Timing
The goal is not to predict the market perfectly. The goal is to make a smart decision when the numbers make sense for you specifically. That distinction is the difference between buyers who act with confidence and buyers who spend months waiting for conditions that may never arrive exactly as imagined.
When the right home is available at a price that works, with a monthly payment that fits comfortably within a realistic budget, with every available tool applied to make the financing as favorable as possible that is the moment that makes sense. That moment does not require knowing where rates will be next month. It requires knowing where you stand today and having a plan built around that reality.
If you would like help building that plan and finding out what buying looks like for your specific situation right now reach out to Dave Weston of the Dave Weston Group at Hallmark Home Mortgage. And share this with someone who may be waiting for the perfect time to buy because the perfect time is almost never what people imagine it will be.
Sources
FederalReserve.gov
MortgageNewsDaily.com
BureauOfLaborStatistics.gov
BankRate.com
Investopedia.com


