🐾 Vic & Gumbo here — and this week we're tackling the question we get more than any other. At open houses in Severna Park, over coffee in Arnold, in DMs from first-time buyers eyeing Annapolis condos, it's always some version of the same thing:
"Should I just wait until mortgage rates come down?"
It's a fair question. And you deserve a real answer — not a sales pitch. So let's look at the actual numbers, what the experts are saying, and what it means specifically for buyers here in Annapolis and Anne Arundel County.
Where Mortgage Rates Actually Stand Right Now
As of mid-July 2026, the average 30-year fixed mortgage is sitting in the mid-6% range — roughly 6.5% to 6.7% depending on the day and your lender. That's actually slightly better than this time last year, but rates have been bouncing around all summer thanks to sticky inflation and global headlines pushing oil prices (and Treasury yields) up and down.
Here's the part nobody wants to hear: the Federal Reserve isn't riding to the rescue. After its June meeting, most Fed policymakers signaled they're more worried about inflation than about cutting rates. Housing economists are broadly saying the same thing — expect rates to stay above 6% for the foreseeable future. The 3% rates of 2021? Those were a once-in-a-generation event, not the normal we're returning to.
Translation: if your plan is "wait for 5% and then pounce," you may be waiting a very long time — and paying rent the whole while.
The Real Math: What Waiting Actually Costs in Annapolis
Let's use a real-world Annapolis example. Say you're buying a $650,000 home (right around the Annapolis median) with 10% down — a $585,000 loan.
Buy today at 6.5%: Your principal & interest payment is about $3,698/month.
Wait for 6.0%: That same loan drops to about $3,507/month. A savings of roughly $190/month. Sounds great, right?
Not so fast, Gumbo. 🐕 Here's what the "just wait" plan leaves out:
Home prices don't wait with you. Annapolis remains a low-inventory market — around 2 months of supply, firmly seller's-market territory. If prices rise just 3% while you wait a year, that $650,000 home becomes $669,500. Your new loan (still 10% down) is $602,550 — and even at 6.0%, your payment is about $3,613/month. Your $190/month savings just shrank to $85. You also need nearly $2,000 more for your down payment, you paid another year of rent, and you missed roughly $19,500 in appreciation that went to the seller instead of you.
And here's the kicker: when rates finally do drop meaningfully, every buyer who's been sitting on the sidelines jumps back in at once. In a supply-constrained market like ours — where the Naval Academy, state government, and the hospital keep demand steady year after year — that means bidding wars and escalation clauses come roaring back. Lower rate, higher price, more competition. Pick your poison.
"Marry the House, Date the Rate"
You've probably heard this one, and it's popular because it's true: the price you pay is permanent, but your rate is not.
If you buy at 6.5% today and rates fall to 5.5% in a couple of years, you refinance and capture the savings. The general rule of thumb: a refinance starts making sense when rates drop about half to three-quarters of a point below what you're paying. Meanwhile, you've been building equity, locking in your housing cost (no more rent increases), and riding Annapolis appreciation the whole time.
The reverse isn't true. If you wait and prices climb, there's no "re-buying" at last year's price.
Maryland-Specific Ways to Soften the Blow
This is where working with a local team pays off. A few money-savers we walk every Anne Arundel County buyer through:
Rate buydowns and seller credits. In today's more balanced negotiating environment, sellers — especially on homes sitting 30+ days — are often willing to credit money toward a temporary or permanent rate buydown. A 2-1 buydown can knock your first-year payment down dramatically while you settle in.
Maryland Mortgage Program (MMP). First-time buyers (and buyers in targeted areas) may qualify for down payment assistance and competitive rates through the state. Many buyers who assume they won't qualify actually do.
The Homestead Tax Credit. Once you buy your primary residence in Maryland, filing this one simple (free!) application caps how fast your property tax assessment can grow. It costs nothing and saves real money over time — and a shocking number of homeowners never file it. We remind every single client.
Shop your lender. With rates bouncing around week to week, the spread between lenders is real. A quarter-point difference on a $585,000 loan is roughly $95/month — nearly $35,000 over the life of the loan.
So... Buy Now or Wait? Our Honest Take
Here's the Vic & Gumbo bottom line:
Buy when YOUR life is ready — not when the Fed says so. If you have stable income, a down payment, and you plan to stay in the home 5+ years, the math in Annapolis and Anne Arundel County favors buying sooner and refinancing later. Time in the market beats timing the market — in stocks and in Severna Park colonials.
Wait if your foundation isn't set. If your job situation is shaky, your credit needs work, or you might relocate in two years — waiting is genuinely the smarter play, and we'll tell you that to your face. (Gumbo has no poker face anyway.)
The worst plan is the one most people are following: waiting for a magic rate number that may never come, while rent goes up and equity goes to someone else.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will mortgage rates go down in 2026? Most housing economists expect 30-year rates to stay above 6% through 2026. The Fed has signaled it's more focused on inflation than rate cuts, and mortgage rates won't fall meaningfully until inflation cools and long-term Treasury yields drop. Nobody can promise a timeline — anyone who does is guessing.
Is Annapolis still a seller's market in 2026? Yes. With roughly 2 months of inventory (6 months is "balanced"), Annapolis and much of Anne Arundel County remain seller's-market territory, though buyers have more negotiating room than during the 2021–22 frenzy — especially on homes sitting past 30 days.
What credit score do I need to buy a home in Maryland? Conventional loans typically want 620+, FHA can go lower, and the best rates generally kick in around 740+. If your score needs work, that's a fixable 6–12 month project — and often worth more than waiting for rates to move.
How much do I need for a down payment in Anne Arundel County? Not 20%. Conventional loans go as low as 3% down, FHA is 3.5%, VA is 0% for eligible service members and veterans (huge here in Navy country), and the Maryland Mortgage Program offers down payment assistance for qualified buyers.
Should I refinance later if I buy at today's rates? That's exactly the strategy. If rates drop half to three-quarters of a point below your rate, refinancing usually pencils out. Buy the house you love at today's price, then swap the rate when the opportunity comes.
Let's Run YOUR Numbers 🐾
Every situation is different — your income, your timeline, your neighborhood, your goals. Vic & Gumbo will give you the honest math for your exact scenario, whether the answer is "buy now" or "wait and prep." No pressure, no fluff, just straight answers (and probably some dog hair).
📞 Call/Text Vic: 443-218-2008 📧 VIC@LNF.COM 🌐 BuySellRentAnnapolis.com
Vic Brocato, Realtor® — Long & Foster Real Estate. Proudly serving Annapolis, Arnold, Broadneck, Severna Park, and all of Anne Arundel County. Gumbo: The World's Best Real Estate Sidekick.
Rates referenced are national averages as of mid-July 2026 and change daily. This article is for educational purposes and isn't financial or lending advice — always confirm current rates and program eligibility with a licensed loan officer.