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Home Sellers Feel Trapped By Their Low Mortgage Rates: Survey

- Rangely García / Money
Rangely García / Money

Home sellers are heading into the spring market with flagging confidence and a persistent feeling that they're “locked in” by ultra-low mortgage rates they snagged during the peak of the pandemic.

With home prices and mortgage rates now elevated due to repeated interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve, sellers and buyers alike are facing a tough market in 2023. A survey from real estate listing site Realtor.com of 1,200 recent or potential home sellers found that many homeowners who want to sell are holding off on listing their homes in hopes of mortgage rates decreasing.

What the data says

“Homeowners who locked in a 30-year fixed rate in the 2-3% range don't necessarily want to give that up in exchange for a rate in the 6-7% range,” Realtor.com Chief Economist Danielle Hale said in a news release.

On the other hand

The takeaway

Even though home prices are historically high — up 7.8% as of March compared to the same time last year, according to Realtor.com — potential and current home sellers don’t necessarily have the advantage they did in 2021 and 2022’s hot housing markets. Listings are sitting on the market longer, and many would-be buyers can’t afford new homes.

That said, data from the National Association of Realtors shows that sellers are still making moves: Existing home sales increased 14.5% in February, the largest monthly uptick since July 2020.

The potential for sellers to profit remains appealing enough for many to give up their current mortgage rates, especially as they begin to trend downward.

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