
Should You Buy Now or Wait for Lower Mortgage Rates in DeSoto and DFW in 2026?
Should You Buy Now or Wait for Lower Mortgage Rates in DeSoto and DFW in 2026?
By Steven J. Thomas — Refind Realty DFW | Envision Home Lenders · Updated June 3, 2026
Every week I get the same question from buyers across DeSoto, Cedar Hill, and the rest of southwest DFW: should I buy now, or should I wait for rates to drop? It is a fair question. Mortgage rates are still higher than most of us would like, and nobody wants to lock in a payment today that looks foolish in six months. But the math behind that decision is not as simple as "wait for a lower rate." Let me walk you through what is actually happening in the DFW market right now, and how to think about the trade-off using real numbers instead of a hunch.
The Direct Answer
In 2026, DFW is a buyer's market with more inventory, longer days on market, and real negotiating room — conditions buyers have not seen since before the pandemic. Waiting for a half-point rate drop is reasonable, but waiting indefinitely usually costs more than it saves once you add rising prices and lost builder incentives. If your budget, credit, and timeline line up, buying now and refinancing later is often the stronger play. Start with a free planning call before you decide.
Neighborhood Spotlights: Where DFW Buyers Have Leverage Right Now
DeSoto — Inventory Up, Patience Rewarded
DeSoto is my home base and one of the best examples of the 2026 shift. As of June 2026, homes here were listing around a $496K median, with properties sitting on the market far longer than they did two years ago, according to Zillow market data. Active inventory has tightened a bit year over year, but homes that are priced right and presented well still take time to sell. For you as a buyer, that means room to ask for closing cost help, a price adjustment, or a rate buydown — things that were almost impossible to get in 2021. If you want to watch DeSoto listings in real time, the Lone Star Living App pulls live MLS data straight to your phone.
Cedar Hill — Value for First Move-Up Buyers
Cedar Hill continues to attract buyers who want a little more space and hill-country views without leaving southwest Dallas County. Listing prices here run noticeably lower on average than neighboring Mansfield, which makes it a smart hunting ground for families making their first move up. Builders and resale sellers are both competing for the same buyer, and that competition works in your favor. Explore what is active across the corridor on the DFW new construction hub.
Mansfield — Higher Price, Strong Demand
Mansfield sits at the top of the southwest DFW price ladder, with a median sale price near $580K in early 2026 and homes taking roughly 87 days to sell, per Movoto market trends. The longer timelines here are not a warning sign — they are an opening. Sellers who have owned for years still have strong equity, which makes many of them willing to negotiate on price or concessions to get the deal closed. Bring a pre-approval and a clear plan, and you can compete well.
Pro Tip: Before you tour a single home, find out where you actually stand. A quick read on your buying power saves weeks of guessing — and if you are selling first, check your Home Selling Score to see how your current house stacks up.
Local Market Trends (Spring – Summer 2026)
- The 30-year fixed mortgage averaged 6.53% the week of May 28, 2026, according to the Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey — down from the 6.7% range seen in late 2024.
- By March 2026, about 30.3% of DFW listings carried a price reduction, with a sale-to-list ratio near 97.1%, based on Redfin data.
- Homes that sold across the metro were averaging in the low 70s for days on market, while unsold inventory lingered closer to 100 days.
- Forecasters expect DFW home prices to move less than 1% to roughly 1.2% over the year as the market stabilizes, per regional outlooks.
Put those numbers together and a picture forms. You have more homes to choose from, more time to decide, and sellers who are far more flexible than they were a few years ago. Rates are the one piece that is still uncomfortable, but they are also the one piece you can change later through a refinance. You cannot go back and re-buy at a lower price once values tick up, and you cannot recover a builder incentive that expired. For context on national price expectations, the Dallas market forecast from Norada lines up with what I see locally.
Cost Breakdown: What Waiting Actually Costs
Let me show you the trade-off on a $450,000 home, which is right in the sweet spot for a move-up buyer in southwest DFW. These are illustrative numbers based on current conditions, not a promise of any specific rate or payment.
- Buy now at 6.53% on a $450K home with 10% down: principal and interest land in the low $2,500s per month.
- Wait a year for a half-point drop to roughly 6.0%, but the home appreciates about 2% to $459K: your monthly savings from the lower rate get partly eaten by the higher loan balance.
- The bigger cost is the $9,000 of added price plus any builder incentive — often worth $20,000 to $50,000 in rate buydowns and closing credits — that may not be on the table next year.
The takeaway is not "rates do not matter." They matter. The point is that a modest rate improvement rarely outruns the combined cost of higher prices and lost concessions. And if rates do fall meaningfully, you can refinance the home you already own. You get the upside without betting your timing.
Builder and Community Insights: Know the Competition
Production builders across DeSoto, Cedar Hill, Midlothian, and Mansfield are still moving homes aggressively, and they are doing it with incentives. Rate buydowns, flex cash toward closing, and free upgrades are common because builders would rather protect their list price than cut it outright. That is good news for you, because those incentives often beat anything a resale seller can match. When a builder is selling new homes every month with modern finishes and a lower effective rate, resale sellers have to compete on price — which is part of why so many listings carry reductions right now.
Here is the piece most buyers miss: if you use my team as your agent on a qualifying new construction purchase, you can get up to 1% back at closing, up to $10,000, through our New Construction Rebate Program. That stacks on top of the builder's incentive. Most buyers walk into the model home alone and never know it was an option.
Financing and Incentives That Make Now Workable
This is where being dual-licensed changes the conversation. I am a broker and a loan officer, so when you sit down with me we look at the house and the financing in the same meeting. That matters because the smartest buyers in 2026 are not just shopping for a low rate — they are structuring the whole deal.
A 2-1 temporary buydown, for example, can lower your rate by two points in year one and one point in year two, giving your budget room to breathe while you settle in. Builder-paid buydowns can do the same without touching your savings. And if rates drop the way many forecasters expect later in the year, a refinance resets your payment for the long haul. The goal is to get you into the right home at a payment you can carry today, with a clear plan to improve it tomorrow. When you are ready to see your real numbers, get pre-approved and start your plan here.
"The buyers who win in a market like this are the ones who plan the financing and the purchase together, instead of treating them as two separate problems."
Conclusion: Decide on Your Numbers, Not the Headlines
The honest answer to "buy now or wait" is that it depends on your numbers, not on a rate forecast you read online. If your credit is solid, your budget has room, and you have a reason to move in the next year, the 2026 DFW market is handing buyers more leverage than they have had in a long time. Waiting for a perfect rate often means paying a higher price and losing the incentives that make a deal work. If your situation is not ready yet, that is fine too — the right move is to build the plan now so you are positioned when it is. Either way, do not guess. Run the math with someone who handles both sides of the table.
Ready to figure out your move? Book a free planning call and we will look at your full picture. Want to watch DFW listings as they hit the market? Download the Lone Star Living App. New to new construction? Start with the New Construction Home Guide.
You're Always Home with Steven J. Thomas.
Key Takeaways
- DFW in 2026 is a buyer's market — more inventory, longer days on market, and sellers who negotiate.
- The 30-year fixed averaged 6.53% in late May 2026, and many forecasters expect modest improvement later in the year.
- A small rate drop rarely beats the combined cost of rising prices plus lost builder incentives.
- Builder buydowns and the New Construction Rebate Program can lower your effective cost today, with refinancing as your upgrade path tomorrow.
- Decide based on your credit, budget, and timeline — not on a rate prediction.
FAQ: Buying vs. Waiting in DFW in 2026
Is now a good time to buy a home in DeSoto or southwest DFW?
For prepared buyers, yes. Inventory is higher, homes take longer to sell, and sellers and builders are offering concessions. That combination gives you negotiating room that did not exist a few years ago.
Will I save money by waiting for mortgage rates to fall?
Sometimes a little, but usually less than people expect. A modest rate drop is often offset by higher prices and expired builder incentives. And if rates fall after you buy, you can refinance the home you already own.
What if rates drop right after I close?
Then you refinance. Buying now locks your price and any current incentives, while a future refinance lets you capture a lower rate without re-competing for the home. You get the best of both timelines.
Are DFW builders still offering incentives in 2026?
Yes. Production builders in DeSoto, Cedar Hill, Midlothian, and Mansfield are using rate buydowns, closing cost credits, and upgrades to keep sales moving. These incentives often beat what a resale seller can offer.
How long does it take to get ready to buy?
It depends on your credit and savings, but many buyers get pre-approved and into a clear plan within a week or two. Starting early means you are ready when the right home appears.
Where can I see current DFW homes for sale?
Download the Lone Star Living App for live MLS listings across DeSoto and the DFW metroplex, updated in real time so you never chase a stale listing.
Steven J. Thomas · Refind Realty DFW · Envision Home Lenders · NMLS #689220 · 128 S. Cockrell Hill Rd, DeSoto, TX 75115 · 972-846-9170. Market data is based on current conditions at the time of writing and is not a guarantee of price, rate, or outcome. Equal Housing Opportunity.