ICE Mortgage Monitor: Early-January Rate Decline Unlocks Refinance Opportunity for Nearly 5 Million Homeowners
Affordability reaches four-year high but remains structurally stretched as home price-to-income ratios remain elevated
“Even small reductions toward 6% rates can significantly boost affordability, particularly for homeowners who could refinance into a lower rate and monthly payments,” said
Key findings from the February Mortgage Monitor include:
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Refinance incentives surged to a nearly four-year high following early-January interest rate declines
OnJanuary 9 , interest rates reached 6.04%, according to the ICE 30-year conforming fixed rate index, which put roughly 4.8 million borrowers “in the money” for a refinance — the highest level since early 2022. That drop effectively increased the eligible population by 20% overnight. Although some of that benefit has since receded, the episode underscores how sensitive the market is to rate shifts in the high‑5% to low‑6% range. Nearly 1.3 million recently originated mortgages carry rates between 6.875% and 6.99%, including more than half a million from 2025, making it the most common rate band last year, and the most sensitive to interest rate drops.
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Housing affordability reached its best level since early 2022, but remains stretched by historical standards
In early January, the monthly principal and interest payment needed to purchase the average-priced home fell by -$164 (-7%) year over year to$2,091 , reducing the share of median household income required to 27.8%. Despite the improvement, the national home price-to-income ratio remains elevated at roughly 4.8:1, well above its long-run average near 4:1. To revert back to pre-pandemic home price-to-income ratios, household incomes would need to rise a little over 15%, assuming home prices remain flat.
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Negative equity is increasing modestly, concentrated in recent vintages and select Southern markets
More than 1.1 million borrowers ended 2025 underwater — the highest level since early 2018 — with negative equity heavily concentrated among FHA andVA loans originated in 2022 or later. Several Southern markets now have more than one in 10 mortgaged homes underwater, even as national equity levels remain historically strong.
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Home price growth slowed to its weakest pace in more than a decade, with regional divergence widening
U.S. home prices rose just 0.6% in 2025, marking the smallest calendar year growth since 2011. The Northeast and Midwest continue to provide stability, while price declines in the South and West are increasingly weighing on national averages.
“Today’s market is full of cross‑currents — borrowers responding quickly to rate shifts, affordability improving for some but not others, and pockets of rising credit stress,” said
The full February Mortgage Monitor report contains a deeper analysis of payment performance trends, and housing market trends featuring ICE Home Price Index (HPI) data.
Further detail, including charts, can be found inthis month’s Mortgage Monitor report.
About the ICE Mortgage Monitor
ICE manages the nation’s leading repository of loan-level residential mortgage data and performance information covering the majority of the overall market, including tens of millions of loans across the spectrum of credit products and more than 160 million historical records. The ICE Home Price Index provides one of the most complete, accurate and timely measures of home prices available, covering 95% of
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Category: Mortgage Technology
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