Current Mortgage Rates in New Jersey — June 2026 by Loan Program
Today’s current mortgage rates in New Jersey: the 30-year conventional averages 6.58%, FHA is approximately 6.31%, VA averages 5.87%, USDA runs near 6.50%, and Non-QM bank statement programs range from 7.00% to 8.50%. Your actual rate depends on credit score, down payment, loan amount, and program type. As a Bergen County-based mortgage broker shopping 20-plus wholesale lenders, Mortgage-World.com gives New Jersey buyers access to rates that retail banks cannot match — because we work for you, not the lender.
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Current Mortgage Rates New Jersey Today — What NJ Borrowers Are Seeing
Current mortgage rates in New Jersey as of June 25, 2026 sit in the 5.87%–6.58% range for government-backed and conventional 30-year fixed programs, based on national averages tracked by Freddie Mac’s Primary Mortgage Market Survey and state-level data from Bankrate and NerdWallet. Specifically, the 30-year conventional fixed rate in New Jersey averages 6.58%, the FHA 30-year rate averages approximately 6.31%, and the VA loan rate is especially competitive at 5.87% for eligible New Jersey veterans. In addition, USDA rates for qualifying rural NJ areas run near 6.50%. Non-QM programs — built for self-employed borrowers, real estate investors, and those with non-traditional income documentation — range from 7.00% to 8.50% depending on documentation type and loan-to-value ratio.
However, these are market averages, not guarantees. Your actual NJ mortgage rate depends on your credit score, down payment, loan amount, property type, and which lender you use. That is exactly why working with a mortgage broker licensed in New Jersey makes a real difference: Mortgage-World.com (NMLS #1630225, headquartered in Ridgefield, NJ) shops 20-plus wholesale lenders to find rates that retail banks cannot offer consumers. Furthermore, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau consistently notes that comparing multiple lenders can save borrowers significantly over the life of a loan — and that comparison is what a New Jersey mortgage broker does automatically on every application.
NJ Rate Comparison
New Jersey Mortgage Rates by Loan Program — June 2026
The table below shows today’s home loan rate averages for each major program available to New Jersey borrowers. Wholesale rates accessed through Mortgage-World.com’s lender network are often meaningfully lower than these market averages, particularly for well-qualified borrowers. Rates update daily and are subject to lock-in conditions.
| Loan Program | 30-Yr Fixed Rate | 15-Yr Fixed Rate | Min Credit Score | Min Down Payment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conventional | ~6.58% | ~6.12% | 620 | 3% (with PMI) |
| FHA Loan | ~6.31% | ~5.90% | 500 | 3.5% (580+ score) |
| VA Loan | ~5.87% | ~5.50% | 500 | 0% required |
| USDA Loan | ~6.50% | N/A | 550 | 0% required |
| Non-QM / Bank Statement | 7.00%–8.50% | N/A | 600 | 10%–20% |
| Jumbo | ~6.75% | ~6.40% | 660 | 10%–20% |
Current Mortgage Rates New Jersey — June 2026 comparison by program | Mortgage-World.com NMLS #1630225 | NJ License MLB 1987
Rate Drivers Explained
What Determines the NJ Rate You Are Offered
The market averages in the table above are starting points, not guarantees. Therefore, every New Jersey borrower receives a unique rate based on several factors that lenders weigh individually. Understanding what moves your rate helps you make decisions that lower it before you lock.
Your FICO score is the single most impactful personal factor in determining your New Jersey mortgage interest rate. On a conventional loan, the difference between a 620 and a 760 score can represent a rate spread of 0.75% to 1.25% — and on a $600,000 NJ home loan, that translates to roughly $250 or more per month. However, FHA pricing is far less sensitive to score variation, making it a stronger option for many NJ buyers in the 620–679 range. VA loans carry essentially no score-based pricing adjustments at all, which is one major reason the VA rate is so competitive. See our New Jersey FHA loan page to compare FHA versus conventional for your score tier.
The more equity you bring to closing in New Jersey, the lower the risk the lender carries — and that directly reduces your mortgage interest rate. Specifically, conventional loans see their best pricing at 80% LTV (20% down) and above. Moving from 5% down to 20% down can trim 0.25%–0.50% off your rate and eliminate PMI entirely. In addition, FHA rates do not improve dramatically with a larger down payment, but putting 10% or more down removes the lifetime MIP requirement. For NJ cash-out refinance borrowers, higher equity also unlocks better rates — see our New Jersey cash-out refinance page for current LTV limits by program.
New Jersey conforming loan limits for 2026 sit at $806,500 for most counties, however high-cost counties such as Bergen, Hudson, Passaic, and Essex reach up to $1,209,750 under Fannie Mae guidelines. Loans above those thresholds require jumbo financing, which currently prices around 6.75% in NJ. Because Bergen County median home prices are well above the national average, jumbo loans are especially common in our market. As a result, our wholesale lender network lets NJ buyers compare conventional, high-balance, and jumbo options side by side. See our NJ conventional refinance page for current limit details.
New Jersey mortgage rates move in step with the 10-year Treasury yield, which reacts daily to Federal Reserve policy, inflation data, and broader economic signals. As of June 2026, the Fed is holding its benchmark rate in the 3.50%–3.75% range, and no cuts are signaled for the remainder of the year. Industry economists generally expect NJ home loan rates to remain range-bound between 6% and 7% through year-end. Therefore, locking your rate immediately after going under contract is usually the right move in this environment. Mortgage-World.com helps NJ clients evaluate float-versus-lock decisions using live market data from our 20-plus wholesale lender partners.
Program Deep Dive
What Each Loan Program Costs Per Month in New Jersey
Each loan program behaves differently in today’s New Jersey rate environment. In addition, each program serves a different type of borrower. Here is what NJ buyers and homeowners need to know about current mortgage interest rates for each major program in 2026:
30-year fixed. Best pricing at 760+ FICO and 20% down. PMI required below 20% down. NJ standard limit $806,500; Bergen, Hudson, Essex, and Passaic County up to $1,209,750.
30-year fixed. Beats conventional for most NJ buyers below 720 FICO. 3.5% down at 580+; 10% at 500–579. Upfront MIP 1.75%. NJ FHA limit up to $1,209,750 in high-cost counties.
The lowest NJ program rate available today. Zero down, no PMI. Eligible NJ veterans and active-duty only. Details at VA.gov. Min 500 FICO. No loan limit for full-entitlement borrowers.
Zero down for eligible NJ buyers in rural areas. Sussex, Warren, Hunterdon, Salem, and parts of Ocean County include USDA-eligible properties. Income limits apply at 115% AMI. Min 550 FICO.
For self-employed NJ buyers and investors. Bank statements, 1099s, assets, or DSCR — no tax returns required. Min 600 FICO. 10%–20% down typical. Covers primary, second homes, and investment properties.
For NJ loans above $1,209,750. Common in Bergen County, Short Hills, Summit, and the Jersey Shore luxury market. Min 660 FICO. 10%–20% down. We access multiple jumbo wholesale programs for NJ buyers.
Loan Requirements
Program Requirements at a Glance
Every New Jersey home loan program carries its own set of qualification standards. However, the right program for you depends on your specific financial profile. Here is a side-by-side look at the key requirements across the programs Mortgage-World.com offers to NJ borrowers:
- Minimum credit score: 500 (3.5% down at 580+)
- Down payment: 3.5% at 580 FICO; 10% at 500–579
- Max DTI: 43% guideline, up to 57% with compensating factors
- Upfront MIP: 1.75% of loan amount
- Annual MIP: 0.55% on 30-year loans over 90% LTV
- NJ loan limit: up to $1,209,750 in Bergen, Hudson & Essex County
- Primary residence only; 1–4 unit properties eligible
- Minimum credit score: 500 (lender overlay may vary)
- Down payment: 0% required for eligible NJ veterans
- No monthly mortgage insurance (no PMI or MIP)
- VA funding fee: 1.25%–3.30% (waived if 10%+ disabled)
- Requires Certificate of Eligibility from the VA
- No NJ loan limit for full-entitlement borrowers
- Primary residence only; 1–4 unit properties eligible
- Minimum credit score: 620
- Down payment: 3% with PMI; 20% to eliminate PMI
- Max DTI: 45% (up to 50% with strong compensating factors)
- PMI required below 20% down (cancelable at 80% LTV)
- Standard NJ limit: $806,500; high-cost counties: $1,209,750
- Primary, second home, and investment properties eligible
- Best rate pricing at 760+ FICO and 80% LTV or lower
- Minimum credit score: 600
- Down payment: 10%–20% depending on program
- Income docs: 12–24 months bank statements, 1099s, or assets
- No tax returns required for bank statement programs
- Max cash-out LTV: 80% on most Non-QM programs
- DSCR investor loans: no personal income qualification required
- Available for primary, second homes, and NJ investment properties
NJ Market Context
Why New Jersey Borrowers Pay Attention to These Rates
New Jersey consistently ranks among the highest-cost states for homebuyers in the Northeast. As a result, the difference between a 6.31% FHA rate and a 6.58% conventional rate on an $800,000 Bergen County home is meaningful — it represents roughly $150 per month and over $54,000 across a 30-year loan. For most NJ buyers, especially first-time buyers in Bergen, Hudson, and Middlesex Counties, selecting the right loan program at the right rate is often the single most financially impactful decision of the purchase.
Moreover, New Jersey property taxes are the highest in the nation, which means monthly housing costs for NJ homeowners include a property tax component that directly affects DTI ratios on loan applications. Because of this, working with a mortgage broker who understands NJ market dynamics — not just a national call center — gives buyers a genuine advantage. In fact, Mortgage-World.com has been helping Bergen County and statewide NJ homebuyers navigate these realities since 2017. Visit our Bergen County mortgage broker page or our best mortgage rates NJ page for more detail on how we serve local buyers.
Related Resources
Related Pages
FHA loan guidelines, credit score minimums, and current FHA mortgage rates for New Jersey buyers seeking low down payment options with flexible qualification standards.
Current cash-out refinance rates and LTV limits for New Jersey homeowners looking to tap their home equity for debt consolidation, renovations, or investment.
Local Bergen County mortgage expertise from a Ridgefield-based broker who knows NJ property taxes, local home values, and the NJ lending landscape.
VA loan eligibility, funding fee details, and today’s VA mortgage rate — the lowest program rate currently available to eligible New Jersey veterans.
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