Real Estate

Mortgage Rates by State: Live Comparison (2026)

Updated 2026-03-10

Data Notice: Figures, rates, and statistics cited in this article are based on the most recent available data at time of writing and may reflect projections or prior-year figures. Always verify current numbers with official sources before making financial, medical, or educational decisions.

Mortgage Rates by State: Live Comparison

Mortgage rates vary by state more than most people realize — up to 0.50% difference between the cheapest and most expensive states. On a $400,000 mortgage, that 0.50% costs or saves $40,000 over 30 years. Here’s where rates stand and why they differ.

Current Average Rates by State (March 2026)

Note: Rates change daily. These are indicative averages for a 30-year fixed, 740+ credit score, 20% down.

States with Lowest Average Rates

State30-Year Fixed15-Year FixedWhy Lower
California6.45%5.65%High competition among lenders, large market
Washington6.48%5.68%Tech sector demand drives lender competition
Colorado6.50%5.70%Strong buyer market, many lender options
Virginia6.50%5.70%Government/military market, VA loan competition
Texas6.52%5.72%Large market, strong lender competition

States with Highest Average Rates

State30-Year Fixed15-Year FixedWhy Higher
New York6.95%6.15%High regulatory costs, mortgage recording tax
Alaska6.90%6.10%Small market, fewer lenders
Hawaii6.88%6.08%Small market, high property costs
West Virginia6.85%6.05%Lower competition, rural market
Vermont6.82%6.02%Small market, fewer lender options

Why Rates Differ by State

  1. Lender competition: States with more lenders (CA, TX, FL) have lower rates because lenders compete for your business
  2. Regulatory costs: State-specific regulations, transfer taxes, and recording fees affect lender costs — passed to borrowers
  3. Default risk: States with higher foreclosure rates or judicial foreclosure processes (which take longer) carry more lender risk
  4. Property values: Higher median home prices attract more lenders, increasing competition
  5. Population density: Rural states have fewer lenders and less competition

How to Get the Best Rate Regardless of State

1. Improve Your Credit Score

Credit ScoreTypical Rate Impact
760+Best available rate
700-759+0.25% above best
660-699+0.50% above best
620-659+1.00%+ above best

A 100-point credit score improvement saves more than moving to a cheaper state.

2. Compare at Least 3-5 Lenders

Freddie Mac research shows borrowers who get 5 quotes save an average of $3,000 over the life of the loan compared to those who only get one. Always get quotes from:

  • Your current bank
  • A credit union
  • An online lender (Better, Rocket, LoanDepot)
  • A mortgage broker (shops multiple lenders for you)

3. Consider the Full Cost, Not Just the Rate

  • APR vs rate: APR includes fees and points. Compare APRs across lenders for the true cost.
  • Points: Paying 1 point (1% of loan amount) typically lowers your rate by 0.25%. Worth it if you’ll stay 5+ years.
  • Closing costs: Range from 2-5% of loan amount. Some lenders offer lower rates but higher closing costs — do the breakeven math.
  • Lock period: Rate locks are typically 30-60 days. Longer locks may cost slightly more.

4. 30-Year vs 15-Year vs ARM

Loan TypeBest For
30-year fixedCertainty, lower monthly payment, invest the difference
15-year fixedAggressive payoff, lower total interest, higher monthly payment
5/1 ARMPlanning to move within 5-7 years, comfortable with rate risk
7/1 ARMSame as 5/1 but with more buffer time

The 15-year saves significant interest but requires a higher monthly payment. At $400K: 30-year at 6.50% = $2,528/month. 15-year at 5.70% = $3,328/month. Total interest saved with 15-year: $230,000.

Key Takeaways

  • Mortgage rates vary up to 0.50% between states — worth knowing but hard to control
  • Credit score improvement and lender shopping save more than state differences
  • Always compare 3-5 lenders — the savings compound over 15-30 years
  • Compare APR (not just rate) to capture the full cost including fees
  • Consider 15-year if you can afford it — the interest savings are massive

Next Steps

Mortgage Affordability Calculator to see what you can afford, or Find a Certified Financial Planner Near You for advice on how a mortgage fits your overall plan.


This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Consult a licensed financial professional before making financial decisions.