30-year fixed
6.37%
Survey week ending 5/7/2026
Practical, local context for your next move in the Dallas-Fort Worth real estate market.
Rates and affordability
Rates affect monthly payment, offer strength, and pricing pressure in every DFW city. Use as directional planning input.
30-year fixed
6.37%
Survey week ending 5/7/2026
15-year fixed
5.72%
Survey week ending 5/7/2026
Gap between 30-year and 15-year fixed averages today: 0.65%.
Source: Federal Reserve Primary Mortgage Market Survey · most recent survey week 5/7/2026. This block refreshed 5/13/2026.
Run payment scenarios on the mortgage calculator.
City snapshots blend U.S. Census American Community Survey figures with Bureau of Labor Statistics labor-market releases. Neighborhood pages add local research and regularly refreshed market notes from this site.
Mortgage benchmarks follow the Federal Reserve’s weekly Primary Mortgage Market Survey for popular fixed-rate products — the same national series lenders watch when they set starting points for quotes.
For more on how to read these charts alongside your own lender and agent, visit the Insights library.
Share the address, condition, timeline, and any recent upgrades so we can give you a practical starting range.
Ask for a pricing plan that includes likely list range, expected buyer objections, prep priorities, and net proceeds.
Compare selling, renting, remodeling, and waiting based on cash flow, equity, lifestyle, and your next purchase plan.
The best estimate combines sold comps, active competition, pending activity, condition, buyer demand, and your home's specific story.
Automated estimates are a starting point, not a pricing strategy. They can be wrong when public records are stale, upgrades are not visible, or the neighborhood has mixed property types.
Some improvements help the sale; others just delay the listing. Focus on changes that remove buyer objections and improve first impressions.
Share your timeline, budget, and target areas. Davron will follow up with concrete next steps.
They can be useful as a rough starting point, but they often miss condition, upgrades, lot quality, concessions, and the exact competition buyers are comparing against right now.
We use the address, property condition, recent upgrades, known repairs, timeline, mortgage payoff if you want a net sheet, and whether you are considering selling, renting, or waiting.
Usually no. Get a pricing and prep review first so you can focus on changes that remove buyer objections instead of spending money on updates that may not return enough value.