Quick reading
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Average monthly mortgage payments increased 40% in five years, from $1,525 to $2,134, while the 30-year fixed rate doubled from 2.9% to 6.47%.
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Every $100,000 borrowed now costs $629 a month, down from $416 in 2021, meaning rate increases, rather than home prices, drove the decline in affordability.
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The personal savings rate fell from 5% to 3.7% as households absorbed rising housing costs even as wages rose to $37.53 an hour.
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American mortgage payments have changed more in the past five years than in any comparable period in modern memory. Rates nearly doubled, while home prices rose only modestly. That shift has completely changed what it costs to own the average American home and explains most of the affordability debate happening around the kitchen table right now.
The median monthly mortgage payment for U.S. homebuyers is now $2,134, based on a 20% down payment on the median-priced existing home of $417,700 and a Bankrate-tracked mortgage rate of 6.6% in May 2026. Five years earlier, in 2021, Bankrate’s historical series put the median monthly principal and interest payment at $1,525 on a median home price of $396,800. That equates to about a 40% increase in the monthly maintenance cost of a typical American home.
The rate drove the change.
In the first half of 2021, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate averaged 2.9%, according to the Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey. As of June 18, 2026, that same survey placed the 30-year fixed term at 6.47%. Home prices also rose, from $363,300 in June 2021 to $429,300 in May 2026, but the payment increased faster than the price because financing costs nearly doubled.
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The math behind that change is simple amortization. At 2.9% over 30 years, every $100,000 borrowed costs about $416 a month. At 6.47%, the same amount costs about $629. In 2026, borrowers will finance a larger loan at a much higher rate, and both pressures will hit the monthly bill at the same time.
What drove rates there?
The Federal Reserve’s tightening cycle is the main reason. The federal funds upper bound peaked at 4.5% on September 17, 2025, then declined and now stands at 3.75% after cuts in September, October, and December 2025. The 10-year Treasury yield, which most directly shapes the price of 30-year mortgages, is 4.49% as of June 17, 2026, with a 12-month average of 4.24%. Mortgage rates have come down from their highs, but they are still nowhere near the pandemic-era floor.