Jason Jackson

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Jason Jackson

The Mortgage Spread is Shrinking

Published on Sep 02, 2025 | Purchasing a Home
The Mortgage Spread is Shrinking
The Mortgage Spread is Shrinking

Have you been waiting for the perfect moment to buy your first home or refinance your current mortgage? Well, here's some news that might just make your day. The mortgage spread—that crucial gap between treasury yields and mortgage rates—has plummeted to its lowest level in over three years. This shift is creating opportunities that savvy homebuyers and homeowners shouldn't ignore.

What Exactly Is the Mortgage Spread?
Think of it this way: if treasury yields are the foundation of mortgage pricing, the spread is everything built on top. Currently sitting at 2.26 percentage points as of August 22, this gap has shrunk dramatically from about 2.5 points at summer's start and a hefty 2.68 points just one year ago.

Chen Zhao, Redfin's head of economics research, offers a perfect analogy. "Think of the spread like a restaurant meal," he explains. "The treasury yield is the cost of raw ingredients, the mortgage rate is the price of the meal on the table, and the spread is the restaurant's markup, which covers the cost of the chef, rent on the restaurant, profit margin, etc."

Why This Drop Matters More Than You Think
Here's where it gets interesting. Back in 2021, when mortgage rates hit record lows, this spread was around 1.5 percentage points—unusually tight. Then came 2022 and 2023. Markets turned turbulent. Lenders got nervous. The spread doubled to levels typically seen during financial crises as mortgage companies hedged their risks by charging higher premiums.

But now? The tide is turning. The spread is gradually declining, and here's the kicker—it still has room to fall further before reaching those more typical 1.5-2 percentage point levels.

What does this mean for you? Simple. Mortgage rates could drop more than treasury yields, regardless of what the Federal Reserve decides to do.

Real Numbers, Real Impact
Let's put this into perspective with actual dollars and cents. A homebuyer working with a $3,000 monthly budget can now afford a $439,000 home at today's average rate of 6.55%. Compare that to May, when rates peaked at 7.08%—that same buyer has gained roughly $20,000 in purchasing power in just a few months.

Twenty thousand dollars. That's a significant chunk of change that could mean the difference between settling for a smaller home and getting the space your family actually needs.

The Perfect Storm for Buyers
But wait, there's more good news brewing. We're currently experiencing a buyer's market. Many homes have been sitting unsold for extended periods, making sellers increasingly willing to negotiate. Price reductions? More common. Closing cost assistance? On the table. Combined with these improving mortgage conditions, the stars might just be aligning for prospective homebuyers.

Real estate agents across various markets are already reporting increased buyer activity over recent weekends, directly correlating with these rate improvements.

Looking Ahead: What September Could Bring
If the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates in September as many experts anticipate—or cuts them more aggressively than expected—mortgage rates could fall even further than current projections suggest. Why? Because that shrinking spread amplifies the impact of any Fed policy changes.

The Bottom Line
Whether you're a first-time buyer who's been priced out or a current homeowner considering refinancing, this mortgage spread compression represents a genuine opportunity. The combination of lower rates, motivated sellers, and increased purchasing power creates a scenario we haven't seen in quite some time.

The question isn't whether conditions will improve further—it's whether you're ready to act when they do.

Give us a call today to get Pre-Approved or to Refinance your Home Loan!