10-Year Mortgage Rates | Compare Rates Today
Compare 10-year mortgage rates and find your preferred lender today. Get the latest information on current 10-year fixed mortgage rates.
Jeff Ostrowski has closely covered two nationwide housing booms and one devastating bust. Before joining Bankrate in 2020, he spent more than 20 years writing about real estate, business, the economy and politics. He previously worked as a reporter at the Palm Beach Post and the South Florida Business Journal.
Since 2019, Jeff has served on the board of the nonprofit National Association of Real Estate Editors. He twice has won gold awards in the group’s journalism contest. His Bankrate coverage of housing affordability was also honored with a Best in Business award from the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing.
When he’s not working, Jeff enjoys surfing, biking and traveling, usually with a surfboard or bike.
When you’re applying for a mortgage, shop around and do your homework — informed borrowers can save thousands of dollars over the life of their loan. Don’t fixate on finding the absolute perfect option, though, or timing your loan to a low point for mortgage rates. If you’re borrowing now, mortgage rates could go down in the future. Avoid worrying about all those things that are both out of your control and impossible to predict.
Compare 10-year mortgage rates and find your preferred lender today. Get the latest information on current 10-year fixed mortgage rates.
Find current 10-year refinance rates and compare lenders to get the best rate.
Compare 20-year refinance rates from lenders in your area. Get the latest information on current 20-year fixed refinance rates.
Compare 15-year mortgage rates and find your preferred lender. Check rates today to learn more about the latest 15-year mortgage rates.
Home prices have risen year over year for nine months in a row.
The average 30-year fixed mortgage rate was 7.33 percent as of April 17, 2024.
The government is stepping up scrutiny of “junk” fees — but are they really junk?
The bottom line: You can choose to refinance, but you’re forced into a loan modification.
They both related to property ownership, but one is a physical thing and the other is abstract.
A tug of war is playing out in the mortgage market. Inflation is pushing rates up, while fears of a recession are pulling them back down.
Until inflation is tamed, mortgage rates are likely to keep rising.
Some options if you want a house but your savings are small.
It’s a mortgage has to adhere to certain standards — to protect both you and the lender.