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Mortgage Rates Hold Steady

March 5, 2026

Mortgage rates held steady at 6% this week, hovering near their lowest level since 2022. In fact, rates are down nearly a full percentage point from this time in 2024, spurring activity from buyers, sellers and owners. As a result, refinance activity is up, and purchase applications are ahead of last year’s pace.

  • The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.00% as of March 5, 2026, slightly up from last week when it averaged 5.98%. A year ago at this time, the 30-year FRM averaged 6.63%.
  • The 15-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 5.43%, slightly down from last week when it averaged 5.44%. A year ago at this time, the 15-year FRM averaged 5.79%.

Information provided by Freddie Mac.

Weekly Market Report

For Week Ending February 21, 2026

Nationally, the number of active listings grew for the 27th consecutive month, rising 10% year-over-year in January, according to Realtor.com’s January 2026 Monthly Housing Market Trends Report. Despite the increase, total inventory remained 17.2% below pre-pandemic levels for the month. The typical home spent 78 days on the market, five days longer than the same period a year ago.

In the Twin Cities region, for the week ending February 21:

  • New Listings decreased 2.4% to 1,117
  • Pending Sales decreased 6.0% to 736
  • Inventory increased 3.4% to 7,866

For the month of January:

  • Median Sales Price increased 1.4% to $375,000
  • Days on Market decreased 3.0% to 64
  • Percent of Original List Price Received decreased 0.1% to 96.8%
  • Months Supply of Homes For Sale remained flat at 2.0

All comparisons are to 2025
Click here for the full Weekly Market Activity Report. From MAAR Market Data News.

Weekly Market Report

For Week Ending January 10, 2026

The U.S. homeownership rate climbed to 65.3% in the third quarter of 2025, up from 65% in the second quarter, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. The homeownership rate remains below the 25-year average rate of 66.3% and is 3.9 percentage points lower than the peak of 69.2% in 2004. Nearly 90% of housing units were occupied in the third quarter, and just over 10% were vacant.

IN THE TWIN CITIES REGION, FOR THE WEEK ENDING JANUARY 10:

  • New Listings decreased 5.1% to 979
  • Pending Sales decreased 13.6% to 458
  • Inventory decreased 1.6% to 7,401

FOR THE MONTH OF DECEMBER:

  • Median Sales Price increased 2.7% to $380,000
  • Days on Market increased 3.6% to 58
  • Percent of Original List Price Received decreased 0.2% to 96.8%
  • Months Supply of Homes For Sale decreased 5.0% to 1.9

All comparisons are to 2025

Click here for the full Weekly Market Activity Report. From MAAR Market Data News.

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Positive Housing Outlook is the Rule of the Day

Local housing market recovery continues to roll forward in the Twin Cities 13-county metropolitan area. In September, more homes sold in less time at higher prices and for closer to asking price than last year. During the month, 4,032 homes went under contract, 11.0 percent higher than September 2011. The median sales price was up 12.3 percent to $174,000; the 10K Housing Value Index showed a more modest 6.8 percent increase to $172,208. The only missing component was seller confidence. Sellers brought 5,341 properties to the market, 4.1 percent fewer than last year. The number of homes for sale on the market fell 29.4 percent to 15,996—near a 9-year low – making seller conviction and optimism increasingly critical.

“One of the most encouraging changes in the market has been more traditional homes and fewer foreclosures,” said Cari Linn, President of the Minneapolis Area Association of REALTORS®. “There’s finally some room to breathe for traditional sellers.”

At 30.6 percent for September 2012, the percentage of all new listings that were lender-mediated (either foreclosure or short sale) was at its lowest level since June 2008. The percentage of all lender-mediated closed sales was 35.3 percent.

These distressed sales tended to sell at a 26.6 percent discount compared to the overall market. Overall median sales price was up 12.3 percent, but prices varied by sale type. Traditional median home prices were up 6.2 percent to $207,000; foreclosure prices were up 13.7 percent to $125,000; and short sale prices were up 0.8 percent to $131,000, their first gain since June 2008.

The number of homes for sale has dropped for 20 consecutive months and is below 16,000 for the first time since December 2003. Months’ supply of inventory fell 40.9 percent to 4.0 months. This indicates that the market is on the brink of favoring sellers. Figures below 4.0 months supply are moving toward a sellers’ market.

The landscape for sellers continues to brighten. On average, homes sold in 101 days, 28.7 percent faster than last year at this time. Sellers received, on average, 94.8 percent of their list price, 4.1 percent more than last year. Cash buyers made up 19.3 percent of all closed sales.

“Interest rates in the Twin Cities are around 3.4 percent and buyers have a justified sense of urgency,” said Andy Fazendin, MAAR President-Elect. “Housing has gone from a laggard the past few years to leading the charge in 2012.”