Close Menu
  • Home
  • Markets
    • Earnings
  • Banks
    • Crypto
    • Investing
  • Business
    • Retail
  • industry
    • Finance
    • Energy
    • Real Estate
  • Politics
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook LinkedIn
Financial Market News
Subscribe Now
  • Home
  • Markets
    • Earnings
  • Banks
    • Crypto
    • Investing
  • Business
    • Retail
  • industry
    • Finance
    • Energy
    • Real Estate
  • Politics
Financial Market News
You are at:Home»Real Estate»Rising mortgage rates threaten Long Island’s spring real estate market
Real Estate

Rising mortgage rates threaten Long Island’s spring real estate market

March 20, 20263 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
OLOGI Ad 2


Mortgage rates are climbing to their highest level in months on inflation fears tied to the Iran war, threatening to raise costs for Long Island homebuyers and dampen the prime real estate selling season.

The average 30-year fixed rate rose to 6.22% for the week ending Thursday, according to Freddie Mac, the major mortgage purchaser, which has published weekly data since 1971. 

But another closely watched gauge published by Mortgage News Daily showed the average 30-year rate rose to 6.53% on Friday.

With Long Island already facing its fewest number of homes for sale in a decade, rising mortgage rates could quash a spring surge of new listings and home sales before April even arrives. That’s because higher consumer prices, particularly in the energy sector, can put upward pressure on rates.

There was great optimism in January for a strong spring market and the prospect of falling mortgage rates, said Stephen Probst, a loan officer at Fairway Home Mortgage in Freeport. The start of the Iran war on Feb. 28 halted that momentum, he said. 

“It’s like somebody jammed on the brakes,” he said. “It’s going to hurt the spring market terribly.”

Still, homebuyers have grown accustomed to rates above 6% over the past few years, said Zahra Jafri, founder and president of Lynx Mortgage Bank in Westbury. In fact, the current rate is below the three-year average of 6.69%, according to Freddie Mac’s data.

But homebuyers are counting on more owners deciding it’s time to sell, and the recent jump could lead more people to postpone putting their homes on the market.

“The concern is that increasing rates will put the pause button on for sellers, which ultimately would impact buyers too because there would not be enough inventory in our Long Island market,” she said.

A shrinking supply of houses, when listings were already at their lowest point in more than a decade at the end of February, could drive up prices.

Prices have already risen significantly since the pandemic, with the median single-family home price at $850,000 in Nassau County and $685,000 in Suffolk in February, according to the latest data from OneKey MLS.

The volume of transactions and mortgage pre-approvals for hopeful buyers has been slower than expected this winter, partly due to heavy snowfall leading some home sellers to postpone listing, said Andrew Russell, owner and founder of RCG Mortgage in Hauppauge. But he expects a rush of buyers signing contracts from April to June. This increase won’t jolt the market in the same way as the doubling of rates did in 2022.

“That was a terrible period,” he said. “I truly feel now clients are not rate sensitive. I really don’t feel the rate number is moving the needle.”

Why mortgage rates are rising

Mortgage rates tend to move in tandem with the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield, which rose to its highest point on Friday since July. Often, political and economic turmoil can help drive this rate down — and lower mortgage rates — as investors seek safe…



Read More: Rising mortgage rates threaten Long Island’s spring real estate market

TGC Banner 1
Business estate Islands long market Mortgage rates real Real estate rising spring threaten
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleU.S. could end Iran military operations ‘right now’ but staying longer
Next Article Costco turns pain at the gas pump into a powerful in-store traffic driver

Related Posts

Small-cap Russell 2000 enters correction territory

March 20, 2026

Starbucks Workers United union sends contract proposal to company

March 20, 2026

Zillow denies its ‘interface design systematically deceives consumers’

March 19, 2026

FDA approves high dose version of Novo Nordisk’s obesity drug Wegovy

March 19, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Energy News

Costco turns pain at the gas pump into a powerful in-store traffic driver

U.S. Solar Installations Fell in 2025 as Trump Attacked Clean Energy

Trump waives U.S. shipping law to steady oil market

Can Hydropower Ride the Wave of the Energy Boom?

Banks News

Major Banks Set to Win Big Under New Federal Capital Rules, Trading Giants

MessagePay and Glia Embed Secure Payments Directly Into AI-Powered Banking

How to introduce best practices to prevent greenwashing

Consumer-Driven Banking: Scaling trust and confidence for Canada’s Open

Real Estate News

Rising mortgage rates threaten Long Island’s spring real estate market

Zillow denies its ‘interface design systematically deceives consumers’

Kentucky Realtors reports more than $916 million in real estate sales

In HelloNation, Real Estate Expert Peggy Kadow Discusses the

© 2026 finmar.news

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.