Mortgage Rates Drop as the Spread Correction Begins
The 30-year fixed fell to 6.37% for the week ending April 9, 2026, the first decline after three weekly increases. The drop came from spread compression, not Treasury movement, and daily locked rates suggest further improvement ahead.
The 30-year fixed averaged 6.37% for the week ending April 9, 2026. That is the first decline after three consecutive weekly increases, and it is the first sign the market is correcting the distortion from the last three weeks. The mortgage-Treasury spread compressed 7 basis points while Treasury yields barely moved. Daily locked-rate data already shows the 30-year rate at 6.276%, well below the weekly average, suggesting this correction has room to run.
How Mortgage Rates Actually Work
Mortgage rates are built from two parts: a baseline (the 10-year Treasury yield, which tracks the broader economy) and a markup (the premium mortgage lenders add for risk, liquidity, and market conditions). In industry terms, that markup is called the mortgage-Treasury spread. When rates move, one of those two parts is responsible. Knowing which one tells you whether the change is likely to persist or reverse.
This Week's Numbers
| Metric | Current | Prior Week | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30-Year Fixed | 6.37% | 6.46% | -0.09 |
| 15-Year Fixed | 5.74% | 5.77% | -0.03 |
| 10-Year Treasury | 4.29% | 4.31% | -0.02 |
| Fed Funds Rate | 3.50%-3.75% | 3.50%-3.75% | Unchanged |
12-Month Rate Trend
What Is Driving Rates
A borrower who locked a 30-year fixed rate this week paid 6.37%, down 9 basis points from last week's 6.46%. On a $320,000 loan, that translates to roughly $19 less per month in principal and interest. The improvement is modest in dollar terms, but the direction matters more than the magnitude. For six weeks, rates moved the wrong way. This week, they reversed. Weekly changes are small, but the trend determines whether you overpay or lock at the right time.
Here is what happened over the last three weeks, and why this week is different. From mid-March through early April, the 30-year rate climbed from 5.98% to 6.46%, a 48-basis-point increase. During that stretch, the 10-Year Treasury yield was essentially flat, moving just 2 basis points. The entire increase came from the mortgage-Treasury spread widening from roughly 170 to 215 basis points. Lenders were repricing risk, not responding to macro signals. Rates rose for the wrong reason.
This week, the correction started. Treasury yields dipped 2 basis points to 4.29%, a minor move. But the spread compressed 7 basis points, from 215 to 208. That compression, not the Treasury move, was responsible for roughly three-quarters of the rate decline. The correction is coming from the same place the distortion came from: the mortgage-Treasury spread. This is not a Fed-driven rate cycle. It is a mortgage market pricing cycle, and the pricing is beginning to normalize.
Where We Are in the Cycle
The 30-year fixed rate at 6.37% sits 52 basis points below the 12-month high of 6.89%, recorded during the week of May 29, 2025, and 39 basis points above the 12-month low of 5.98% from the week of February 26, 2026. Year over year, rates are 25 basis points lower: 6.37% today versus 6.62% in April 2025. The annual improvement is real, but the path has been anything but smooth.
The March spike from 5.98% to 6.38% erased months of gradual improvement in a matter of weeks. This week's pullback to 6.37% is the first reversal. It is small, just 1 basis point below last week's PMMS for March, but directionally significant because the driver (spread compression) is the same mechanism that caused the spike. The spread expanding from 170 to 215 broke the improvement trend. The spread compressing from 215 to 208 is the first sign it is repairing.
Daily locked-rate data paints a more encouraging picture. As of April 9, the 30-year conforming rate from actual lender pricing stood at 6.276%, already 9 basis points below the 6.37% weekly survey average. In falling-rate environments, daily rates lead weekly survey data. The weekly PMMS is lagging a market that has already moved further. Next week's reading will likely show continued improvement.
What Borrowers Pay at Current Rates
These ranges reflect where well-qualified borrowers are actually locking today, not just survey averages.
| Product | Typical Rate Range | Monthly P&I ($320K) |
|---|---|---|
| Conventional 30-Year Fixed | 6.30%-6.40% | $1,981-$2,002 |
| Conventional 15-Year Fixed | 5.60%-5.75% | $2,632-$2,657 |
| 5/1 ARM (initial rate) | 5.85%-6.05% | $1,888-$1,929 |
| FHA 30-Year Fixed | 5.90%-6.10% | $2,045-$2,086 |
| VA 30-Year Fixed | 5.90%-6.00% | $1,898-$1,919 |
Payment Impact
The table below shows how rate changes affect monthly principal and interest on a $320,000 loan (a $400,000 home with 20% down). These figures cover principal and interest only; actual closing costs and ongoing expenses add to the total.
| Rate | Monthly P&I | vs. Current |
|---|---|---|
| Current (6.37%) | $1,995 | - |
| -0.25% (6.12%) | $1,943 | -$52/mo |
| -0.50% (5.87%) | $1,892 | -$103/mo |
| -1.00% (5.37%) | $1,791 | -$204/mo |
| 12-mo high (6.89%) | $2,105 | +$110/mo |
| 12-mo low (5.98%) | $1,914 | -$81/mo |
What This Means for Borrowers
Buyers Under Contract
This week's decline is a stabilization signal. Borrowers under contract who are weighing whether to lock a rate now have a concrete data point: the spread-driven spike has started to reverse, and daily locked rates are running in the 6.27%-6.30% range, below the 6.37% survey average. Locking in the 6.30%-6.40% range captures the improvement without betting on further compression. A 30- to 45-day lock is the pragmatic move for borrowers closing in the next two months.
Buyers with Flexibility
The improvement this week did not come from the Fed. It came from the mortgage market recalibrating its own risk premium. That distinction matters for your timeline. Fed cuts are scheduled events you can see on a calendar. Spread compression happens gradually, driven by MBS demand and investor sentiment, and is harder to time. Watch the spread, not just headlines about the Fed. If it continues compressing from 208 toward 180-190, rates will improve meaningfully without any policy change. Borrowers considering an adjustable-rate mortgage may find ARM initial rates increasingly attractive, since ARM pricing is less sensitive to long-term MBS market dynamics.
Refinance Candidates
Small weekly moves are noise. The trend is the signal. For six weeks, the trend was widening spreads and rising rates. This week, the trend shifted to compression and falling rates. That shift, not the 9-basis-point decline itself, is what refinance candidates should focus on. Borrowers holding rates at 7.25% or above still have clear savings available. Those near 7.00% should watch whether the spread continues compressing before paying closing costs to lock in a rate that may improve further.
Rate Buydown Math
At current rates, one discount point costs $3,200 (1% of a $320,000 loan) and reduces the rate by approximately 0.25%. That produces $52 per month in savings, with a breakeven period of 62 months, roughly 5.1 years. Buying down your rate only makes sense if you expect to hold the loan longer than the breakeven period. With spread compression underway, borrowers who plan to stay fewer than five years may be better served by the market doing the work for them.
See what rate and payment you actually qualify for in today's changing market.
Get Your PlanWhat to Watch
The mortgage-Treasury spread is the first thing to watch. Whether it continues compressing from 208 basis points toward the 170-basis-point historical average will determine the pace of rate improvement more than any single economic report. The 7-basis-point compression this week is a start, but 38 basis points of excess premium remain.
On the macro side, Treasury yield drivers are next. The April 15 retail sales report and weekly jobless claims data will shape yield expectations. Weaker economic signals would push yields lower, compounding the benefit of spread compression. The FOMC May 6-7 meeting does not include updated projections, but the statement will signal whether the hawkish stance from March holds. The June 17-18 FOMC includes the Summary of Economic Projections and dot plot, making it the next high-impact catalyst for rate direction.
MortgageLoans.net will publish an updated rate analysis following the next PMMS release on April 17, 2026.
What Would Need to Change
For rates to fall below 6%, two things would need to happen at the same time. First, the mortgage-Treasury spread would need to compress from 208 basis points back to its historical average of 170. Second, Treasury yields would need to hold at or below 4.30%. Together: 4.29% + 1.70% = 5.99%. Spread normalization alone gets rates near 6%. A Fed cut on top of that pushes rates into the mid-5s. Neither requires a dramatic economic shift. Both require patience.
Key Takeaways
- The mortgage-Treasury spread compressed 7 basis points (215 to 208), driving this week's rate decline. This is the first sign of correction after three weeks of spread-driven increases. The spread, not the Fed, remains the dominant force in rate movement.
- The 30-year fixed rate fell 9 basis points to 6.37% for the week ending April 9, 2026, the first weekly decline since mid-March. Treasury yields fell just 2 bps, meaning most of the improvement came from spread compression. Rates fell for the right reason.
- Daily locked-rate data shows the 30-year conforming rate at 6.276% as of April 9, already below the 6.37% weekly survey average. The weekly PMMS is lagging a market that has already moved further. Next week's reading will likely show continued decline.
- At the historical average spread of 170 bps, current Treasury yields would produce a 30-year rate of approximately 5.99%, not 6.37%. The 38-basis-point premium above normal is shrinking but still costs borrowers extra every month.
- Borrowers under contract should consider locking in the 6.30%-6.40% range to capture the improvement. Buyers with flexibility should watch the spread, not just the Fed, for signals on timing.
- For rates to fall below 6%: spread normalization alone gets rates near 6%. A Fed cut on top of that pushes rates into the mid-5s.