1. What Is a Fixed-Rate Mortgage?
A fixed-rate mortgage locks in your interest rate for the entire loan term — whether that is 15 or 30 years. From your very first payment to your last, the principal and interest portion never changes. If you borrow at 6.81%, you pay 6.81% in year 1, year 10, and year 30.
This predictability is the defining feature and primary appeal of fixed-rate loans. Your housing payment becomes a known, stable expense in your budget regardless of what happens to interest rates in the broader economy.
Best for: Long-term homeowners who value payment certainty, buyers stretching to afford a home (30-year), or buyers who want to build equity rapidly and minimize total interest (15-year).
2. What Is an Adjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM)?
An ARM starts with a fixed interest rate for an initial period, then adjusts periodically based on a market index. The rate — and therefore your payment — can change over time, either up or down.
Common ARM Types
| ARM Type | Fixed Period | Adjustment Frequency | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5/1 ARM | 5 years | Annually after year 5 | Staying 5–7 years |
| 7/1 ARM | 7 years | Annually after year 7 | Staying 7–9 years |
| 10/1 ARM | 10 years | Annually after year 10 | Staying up to 10 years |
How ARM Rates Are Calculated
After the initial fixed period, your rate is recalculated as:
- Index: A market benchmark — most modern ARMs use SOFR (Secured Overnight Financing Rate), which replaced LIBOR. Your lender will specify the index.
- Margin: A fixed spread added by your lender (typically 2.0%–3.0%). This doesn't change over the loan's life.
3. How ARM Adjustments Work: Rate Caps Explained
Rate caps protect you from extreme payment shock. A typical ARM has three caps, written as a three-number sequence like 2/2/5:
Worked Example: 5/1 ARM at 5.5% with 2/2/5 Caps
| Period | Rate | What Happened |
|---|---|---|
| Years 1–5 | 5.5% | Initial fixed rate — no changes |
| Year 6 (1st adj.) | Up to 7.5% | If SOFR rose significantly, initial cap limits increase to +2% |
| Year 7 (2nd adj.) | Up to 9.5% | Periodic cap allows another +2% maximum increase |
| Year 8+ | Max 10.5% | Lifetime cap: rate can never exceed 5.5% + 5% = 10.5% |
Note: Rates can also adjust downward. If SOFR falls, your ARM rate could decrease at each adjustment — a potential benefit over a fixed-rate loan in a declining rate environment.
4. Current Rate Environment: May 2026
| Product | Avg Rate (May 2026) | Monthly Payment on $400K |
|---|---|---|
| 30-Year Fixed | 6.81% | $2,631 |
| 15-Year Fixed | 6.12% | $3,409 |
| 5/1 ARM (initial) | ~6.2% | ~$2,447 |
| 7/1 ARM (initial) | ~6.3% | ~$2,475 |
The 5/1 ARM saves approximately $184/month compared to the 30-year fixed during the initial period — $11,040 over 5 years. Whether that savings justifies the future rate uncertainty is the central question this guide addresses.
With 2026 rates at moderate historical levels, the ARM discount is present but not as dramatic as it was when 30-year fixed rates were 7.5%+ in 2023. As the Fed signals potential rate stability, fixed-rate loans are gaining relative appeal versus ARMs.
5. When an ARM Makes Sense
- You plan to sell before the fixed period ends. If you're buying a starter home and expect to sell in 4–6 years, a 5/1 ARM captures the initial low rate while you avoid the adjustment period entirely. This is the classic "sweet spot" for ARM usage.
- You expect to refinance before the adjustment. If you anticipate refinancing into a fixed-rate loan before year 5 (say, because you expect rates to fall), an ARM gives you the lower initial rate without permanently locking in today's rate.
- Short-term ownership. Relocating for work, buying a home while waiting for a specific opportunity — any situation where 5–7 years is likely your maximum tenure.
- You can comfortably absorb the worst-case payment. If your budget can handle the maximum possible ARM payment (calculate it: initial rate + lifetime cap applied to your balance), the initial savings may be worth it even if you stay longer than planned.
- The rate differential is significant. When ARMs are 1%+ cheaper than fixed rates (as they were in 2023), the savings during the initial period are substantial and the break-even math favors ARMs for shorter time horizons.
6. When a Fixed-Rate Makes Sense
- Long-term homeowners (10+ years). If you plan to stay in the home long-term or indefinitely, the stability of a fixed rate eliminates all future payment uncertainty. You're protected if rates rise dramatically.
- You need payment certainty for budgeting. Fixed housing costs allow more reliable financial planning, especially for families with tight budgets or single-income households.
- Low risk tolerance for rate increases. If the prospect of significantly higher payments would create financial stress, a fixed rate provides peace of mind even at a slightly higher initial cost.
- Rates are at historically moderate levels. At 6.81%, today's 30-year fixed rates are above recent lows but well below the historical average of 7–8%. Locking in a moderate rate protects against future spikes, which have historically been unpredictable.
- The rate spread is narrow. When the ARM discount over fixed rates is small (less than 0.5%), the risk-reward of choosing an ARM deteriorates. The math needs to show meaningful savings to justify the uncertainty.
7. ARM Red Flags to Watch For
- Lenders downplaying the worst-case scenario. Always ask: "What is the maximum possible rate and payment after all adjustments?" A trustworthy lender will show you this clearly. If they won't, walk away.
- Very short initial periods (1/1 ARM). ARMs with only one year of fixed rate before annual adjustments are high-risk for almost all borrowers. The initial savings rarely justify the uncertainty of annual adjustments from year 2 onward.
- Teaser rates that seem dramatically below market. Some ARMs advertise initial rates far below typical ARM rates. Read the fine print — very low teaser rates often come with higher margins, meaning post-adjustment rates can be significantly above market.
- Not stress-testing your budget. Before choosing any ARM, calculate your monthly payment if the rate hit its lifetime cap. If you cannot comfortably afford that payment, an ARM is not right for you.
- Ignoring the index and margin. The margin is what your lender adds to the index — it doesn't change and can vary significantly between lenders. A lower initial rate with a higher margin may be worse long-term than a slightly higher initial rate with a lower margin.
8. How to Decide: A Decision Framework
Step-by-Step Decision Framework
Use our interactive ARM vs Fixed calculator to model your specific loan amounts, rates, and caps — and see the total cost comparison over any time horizon.
Open ARM vs Fixed CalculatorFrequently Asked Questions
For educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Consult a qualified financial advisor.