Mortgage Rates Hit 5.99% Again: What the Data Says Buyers Should Do Now
Mortgage Rates Hit 5.99% Again: What the Data Says Buyers Should Do Now
Mortgage rates just printed around 5.99% in some daily rate trackers, which is a meaningful shift after spending a long time above 6%.
If you have been on the sidelines waiting for a window to open, this is the kind of moment that tends to create opportunity, especially for buyers who are prepared.
There is also a second piece to pay attention to: early demand signals.
What the February data is showing
MBS Highway’s February 2026 survey is pointing to a market that is starting to wake up:
The National Housing Index jumped 9 points from January to 43
Buyer activity jumped 12 points to 47
Even though the index is still below 50 (the expansion line), that jump matters because demand tends to return before the headlines catch up.
MBS Highway even notes that if mortgage rates remain in the low 6% range or move into the high 5% range, the overall index could move into expansion territory for the first time in about 20 months.
Rates are near 6%, but remember what that really means
When you hear “rates are 5.99%,” treat it as a market snapshot, not a guaranteed offer.
Rates vary by credit score, down payment, loan type, occupancy, points, and even the day you lock. For example, Freddie Mac’s weekly survey had the average 30 year fixed rate at 6.01% as of February 19, 2026.
The point is not whether your exact rate is 5.99% or 6.01%. The point is that we are back in a range that can noticeably improve monthly payments and purchasing power compared to the higher rate environment.
Why this window can close quickly
As rates improve, two things often happen:
More buyers re-enter the market
Sellers get more confident and negotiations get tougher
You do not need a frenzy for the leverage to shift. You just need enough new demand to bring back competition on the best homes.
So the move is not “wait until it feels safe.” The move is “get ready while the market is still quiet.”
What prepared buyers do differently
Prepared does not mean perfect. It means you can act fast when the right home appears.
Here is a simple preparation checklist:
Know your payment range first. Not a guess, a real number.
Get fully pre-approved, not just pre-qualified.
Build a lock strategy. If you are 10 to 30 days from closing, certainty can matter more than trying to squeeze out an extra eighth.
Know your refinance break-even plan. If rates drop later, you can evaluate refinancing based on math, not hope.
Move like a buyer, not a browser. When you find the right fit, you are ready to write a clean offer.
Bottom line
Rates near 6% can create a real buying power shift, and February survey data suggests demand is already starting to rise.
If you want a free, no pressure breakdown of what today’s rates mean for your buying power, I can run it in about 10 minutes and give you a clear next step.
Sources: Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey, MBS Highway Housing Index, major news reporting that cites Zillow rate trackers.


