NOTE: the rates discussed in this article are from MBA's weekly survey and pertain to last week. This week's rates have already moved significantly higher according to our daily data.
Mortgage application activity fell sharply last week as rising rates weighed on demand. The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) reported a decrease of10.9%on a seasonally adjusted basis for the week ending March 13.
The decline was driven primarily by refinance activity. The Refinance Index dropped19%from the previous week, though it remained69%higher than the same week one year ago. MBA noted that conventional refinance applications saw the steepest pullback, as rates moved notably higher over the past two weeks.
Purchase demand proved more resilient. The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index increased1%from one week earlier and was12% higherthan the same week one year ago. Gains in FHA and VA purchase activity helped offset flat conventional demand, with improving inventory and slower home price growth continuing to support year-over-year strength.
According to Joel Kan, MBA’s Vice President and Deputy Chief Economist,mortgage ratesmoved higher alongside Treasury yields, driven in part by elevated oil prices and broader inflation concerns tied to geopolitical developments. The average 30-year conforming mortgage rate rose to its highest level since December 2025.
The composition of activity shifted notably away from refinances. The refinance share of total applications decreased to52.3%from 57.8% the prior week, while ARM share declined to8.0%. FHA share increased to19.4%, VA share rose to16.7%, and USDA share remained unchanged at0.4%.
Source: MND NewsWire