The Federal Reserve doesn’t set mortgage rates outright. But its decisions in setting interest rates do play a role in the percentages lenders offer would-be homeowners. And even if the Fed keeps things unchanged, mortgage rates can still fluctuate.
So, overall, how do the Fed’s monetary-policy moves affect mortgages — and influence the cost of borrowing to buy that dream home? Here’s how it all works.
What the Federal Reserve does
The U.S. Federal Reserve sets borrowing costs for shorter-term loans by changing its federal funds rate. This rate dictates how much banks pay each other in interest to borrow funds from their reserves, kept at the Fed on an overnight basis.
In 2022 and 2023, the Fed increased this key interest rate to help calm inflation, hikes that made it more costly for Americans to borrow money or take out credit. Then, at the end of 2024, the Fed made rate cuts at three consecutive meetings, a total decrease of 100 basis points.
Fixed-rate mortgages — the most popular type of home loan — don’t mirror the federal funds rate, however; they track the 10-year Treasury yield (more on that below). The fed funds rate does affect short-term loans, such as credit card rates and the rates on new home equity loans and lines of credit.
The Fed also buys and sells debt securities in the financial marketplace. This helps support the flow of credit, which tends to have an overarching impact on mortgage rates.
The Fed's latest meeting
At its meeting on Jan. 28-29, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) voted to hold its benchmark interest rate at its current range of 4.25-4.5 percent. Inflation is still near 3 percent and has shown little progress toward the Fed’s target of 2 percent, says Greg McBride, CFA, chief financial analyst for Bankrate.
“The nation’s economy continues to be resilient against long-term economic setbacks, which means that the Fed is in no imminent need to continue its rate cuts,” Dr. Selma Hepp, chief economist for CoreLogic, said in a statement. “Nevertheless, there are sectors of the economy, such as the housing market and pockets of the income spectrum, that are challenged by high rates and overall high prices.”
Rates are actually higher than they were before the Fed began its cuts last September, leaving many prospective homebuyers — and homeowners hoping to refinance — in limbo.
“Mortgage rates remain above 7 percent, a further headwind to affordability and keeping home sales on ice,” McBride says.
But the housing market is just one piece of the larger economy that the Fed takes into account. In a press release on Jan. 29, the Fed reiterated that it makes its decisions based on labor market conditions, inflation pressures and inflation expectations, and financial and international developments.