Rates moved again this week, and that’s usually when the same questions start coming up.
Should I lock now or wait?
What if rates drop right after I lock?
What if they go higher?
The reality is, this isn’t really about predicting the market. It’s about making a decision based on your situation.
When you lock your mortgage rate, you’re securing a specific rate for a set period of time, usually 30 to 60 days.
If rates go up, you’re protected. If rates go down, you typically don’t benefit unless your lender offers a float-down option.
You’re choosing certainty over risk.
Rates haven’t been stable. They’ve been moving based on inflation data, economic reports, and even global events.
So when people ask if they should wait, what they’re really asking is whether things will get better from here.
That’s not an easy call.
Most people try to time it. They wait for the “perfect” moment to lock.
But locking isn’t about getting the absolute lowest rate possible. It’s about protecting a deal that already works.
If your numbers make sense today, waiting introduces risk, not opportunity.
Rates are driven by a combination of factors like inflation, the bond market (especially the 10-year Treasury), economic strength, and overall market sentiment.
Even headlines can move rates in the short term.
That’s why trying to predict them perfectly usually doesn’t work.
Locking usually makes sense when you’re under contract, within 30 to 45 days of closing, and comfortable with the payment.
At that point, the goal is simple: protect what you have.
If you’re early in the process or not under contract yet, you may have more flexibility.
But it’s important to understand that waiting is not a strategy. It’s a bet.
A lot of buyers plan to wait until rates drop.
But when rates drop, more buyers enter the market. That increases competition, and prices can move up.
So even if you get a better rate, you may end up paying more for the home. This is the same dynamic we break down when deciding whether to buy now or wait.
One thing that makes this decision easier is having flexibility after you lock.
At Nateloans, we offer a free rate float-down. If you lock your rate and market rates improve by at least 0.25%, we can renegotiate your rate lower.
That means:
It takes a lot of the pressure out of trying to time everything perfectly.
Instead of trying to guess the market, focus on whether the payment works for you based on your income and pay stubs
Rates can change. Your purchase price doesn’t.
There’s no perfect time to lock. There’s just the point where protecting the deal matters more than chasing a slightly better rate.
Trying to time it usually leads to hesitation. Making a decision based on your numbers puts you in control.
This is one of those decisions that’s much easier when you can actually see the numbers side by side.
At Nateloans, we walk through different scenarios so you understand exactly what happens if rates move up or down.
If locking makes sense, we’ll tell you. If waiting makes more sense, we’ll tell you that too.
This is one of the biggest financial decisions you’ll make, and it has to make sense for you.
Whenever you’re ready, you can get started here and we’ll walk through everything with you step by step.