Chris Johnson

Associate Broker | NMLS: 235072


What Is a Mortgage Rate Lock — and When Should I Lock in the Bay Area? | CaliLoanPro

What Is a Mortgage Rate Lock — and When Should I Lock My Rate in the Bay Area?

A Plain-English 2026 Guide for San Jose & Santa Clara County Home Buyers

If you’ve ever been in the middle of a home purchase and heard your lender say “do you want to lock your rate today?” — and had no idea what that actually meant or what the right answer was — this post is for you.

The rate lock question is one of the most consequential decisions in the mortgage process. Get it right and you could save thousands. Get it wrong — or simply not understand the decision — and you’re exposed to market swings at exactly the wrong time.

Here’s everything you need to know about mortgage rate locks in 2026, in plain English.

What Is a Mortgage Rate Lock?

A mortgage rate lock is a formal agreement between you and your lender that holds a specific interest rate for a set period of time. When you lock your rate, the lender commits to honoring that rate at closing — regardless of where rates move between now and then — as long as your loan details remain unchanged and you close within the lock window.

Think of it like a price guarantee. If you’re buying a home in San Jose and rates are 6.51% today, a rate lock means that’s your rate even if the market pushes rates to 7.00% before your closing date.

Key Distinction — Quote vs. Lock

A rate quote is a snapshot of the market today. A rate lock is a binding commitment from your lender. Many buyers confuse the two. You don’t have a locked rate until your lender confirms it in writing with a specific expiration date.

Rate locks typically cover 30, 45, or 60 days. Some lenders offer longer locks — up to 90 or 120 days — often for a fee or a slightly higher rate. The lock begins when your lender formally confirms it in writing, not when you first receive a quote.

Why It Matters in the Bay Area

In a market like Santa Clara County, where the median home price is $1.6M and most loans are in jumbo territory, a small move in your rate has an outsized impact on your monthly payment and total interest cost.

Here’s what a 0.25% rate increase means on a $1.4M loan:

RateMonthly P&IAnnual Cost30-Year Extra Interest
6.51% (locked today)~$8,852~$106,224
6.76% (rate rises 0.25%)~$9,067~$108,804+$77,400
Difference+$215/mo+$2,580/yr+$77,400 total

The Bottom Line

A single quarter-point rate move on a typical Bay Area jumbo loan equals $215 per month, $2,580 per year, and more than $77,000 over 30 years. The rate lock decision deserves more than a quick yes or no.

How the Rate Lock Process Works in Practice

In a typical Bay Area purchase, here’s how the rate lock timeline plays out:

1

Offer Accepted

Once you’re in contract, the clock starts. Most Bay Area transactions close in 21–30 days. Your lender begins processing your file immediately.

2

Rate Lock Conversation

Within the first few days of being in contract, your lender should discuss your lock options — what periods are available, whether there’s a cost difference, and what makes sense given your timeline.

3

Locking the Rate

Your lender submits a formal lock request. You’ll receive written confirmation of your locked rate, the lock period, and the expiration date. Keep this document.

4

Rate Lock Expiration Risk

If your closing is delayed past the lock window, an extension typically costs 0.125%–0.25% of the loan amount. On a $1.4M loan, that’s $1,750–$3,500. Maintaining your closing timeline is the cleanest way to avoid this cost.

5

Closing

At closing, your rate is exactly what was locked — regardless of where market rates have moved in the weeks since.

When Should You Lock Your Rate?

There’s no universal right answer, but here are the principles that guide a smart decision:

  • Lock when you’re comfortable with the rate in front of youIf today’s rate produces a monthly payment you can comfortably manage, locking and removing the uncertainty is often the right call. Waiting costs you certainty — if rates rise, you’ve lost it for nothing.
  • Lock when the market is volatile or trending upwardRight now — with the 30-year fixed at 6.51% and global economic uncertainty keeping upward pressure on yields — locking a known rate is often more valuable than floating and hoping.
  • ⚖️
    Consider floating when rates are on a clear downward trendIf rates have been falling steadily with strong evidence they’ll continue, floating can sometimes capture a better outcome. This is a calculated risk, not a default strategy.
  • 💡
    Ask about a float-down option before you lockSome lenders offer a “float-down” provision — you lock, but if rates drop by a defined amount before closing, you can capture the lower rate. Ask about this before you lock, not after.
  • 📅
    Have the rate lock conversation before you’re in contractThe best time is before you write an offer — not during an active escrow when every day counts and the pressure is high.

Which Lock Period Is Right for Your Transaction?

30

Day Lock

Best for: Standard resale transactions with a clear near-term close. Typically free or lowest cost. Most Bay Area resales close well within this window.

45

Day Lock

Best for: Transactions with some complexity — HOA docs, appraisal issues, condo review. Provides a comfortable buffer for minor delays. Modest cost if any.

60

Day Lock

Best for: Near-term new construction or complex jumbo files needing more processing time. Costs slightly more but provides real timeline protection.

90+

Day Lock

Best for: Long-lead new construction where closing is more than 60 days out. Usually priced higher or includes a buydown fee — worth analyzing carefully.

Bottom Line on Lock Periods

For most Bay Area resale transactions, a 30- or 45-day lock covers the timeline comfortably. The right choice depends on your closing certainty and how much buffer you want.

Common Misunderstandings About Rate Locks

“My rate quote is my locked rate.”

Not until it’s formally confirmed in writing. A quote is what the market looks like today. A lock is a binding commitment. Many buyers make this mistake and are surprised when their rate changes at closing because they never actually locked.

“If rates drop after I lock, I’m stuck.”

Not necessarily. If your lender offers a float-down option, you may be able to capture a lower rate if rates fall by a defined amount. Ask about this before you lock — not after.

“Locking early is always the safe play.”

Locking too early on a transaction that ends up delayed can cause your lock to expire, triggering extension fees or re-locking at a worse rate. Lock timing should match your actual closing timeline — not just your optimism about it.

“The rate lock and loan approval are the same thing.”

No. A rate lock confirms your interest rate. Loan approval is a completely separate process — underwriting still needs to clear. Both need to happen for your loan to fund.

“Floating is free.”

Floating means you’re fully exposed to market risk. If rates rise while you’re floating, that exposure has a real and measurable cost — as the table above shows, $215/month or more on a typical Bay Area loan. “Free” doesn’t mean “without consequence.”

What to Think About Before You Decide

Know your closing timeline.

The more certainty you have about when you’ll close, the easier the lock period decision becomes. A 21-day close is a 30-day lock. A complex jumbo with condo review might need 45 days. Be honest about your timeline before choosing a period.

Understand your risk tolerance.

If the thought of rates rising $200/month while floating keeps you up at night, lock. If you’re financially comfortable with some rate exposure and have solid reason to believe rates will improve, a measured float can make sense.

Ask about float-down options before you lock.

Not all lenders offer them, and those that do price them differently. It’s worth asking upfront — before you’re in active escrow under time pressure.

Don’t try to perfectly time the market.

The goal of a rate lock isn’t to catch the absolute lowest rate. It’s to protect yourself from significantly worse outcomes and proceed with confidence. Certainty has real value, especially in a Bay Area transaction where the financial stakes are high.

Run the real numbers side by side.

Before you decide, ask your lender to show you the actual monthly payment difference between today’s rate and a rate 0.25% higher. Seeing the real dollar impact — not a percentage — makes the decision much clearer and turns an abstract question into a concrete one.


Not Sure What to Do With Your Rate Right Now?

The rate lock conversation is one I have with every client before they’re in contract. Let’s talk through your options while there’s no pressure to decide.

(408) 687-6109 — Call or Text Chris

When a Conversation Makes Sense

The rate lock conversation is one I have with every buyer I work with — before they’re in contract, not during. Understanding your options ahead of time means you can move confidently when you’re in an active transaction and every day counts.

If you’re shopping for a home right now or thinking about writing an offer soon, I’m happy to walk you through your rate lock options, what a lock costs at today’s rates, and what strategy makes sense for your specific situation.

Chris Johnson — Associate Broker, Affinity Mortgage 📞 (408) 687-6109  ·  ✉️ chris_j@ouraffinity.com  ·  🌐 caliloanpro.com
If you know someone in the middle of a home purchase who’s uncertain about the rate lock decision — feel free to pass this along or send them my way. It’s a 10-minute conversation that can make a meaningful difference.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a mortgage rate lock?

A mortgage rate lock is a formal agreement with your lender that holds your interest rate for a set period — typically 30, 45, or 60 days — regardless of where market rates move. As long as you close within the lock window and your loan details haven’t changed, your rate stays exactly where it was locked.

When should I lock my mortgage rate?

The right time depends on your closing timeline, risk tolerance, and where rates are trending. Locking when you’re comfortable with the rate in front of you is generally the sound approach. In a volatile or rising rate environment like today, locking sooner is often the better call.

What happens if rates drop after I lock?

If your rate lock includes a float-down provision, you may be able to capture a lower rate if rates fall by a defined amount before closing. Without a float-down, your locked rate stays in place. Ask about float-down options before you lock — not after.

How long does a rate lock last?

Most rate locks cover 30, 45, or 60 days. Longer locks are available — typically for new construction — but usually come at a higher rate or with an upfront fee. For most Bay Area resale transactions, 30 or 45 days covers the timeline comfortably.

What does a rate lock extension cost?

An extension typically costs 0.125%–0.25% of the loan amount. On a $1.4M loan, that’s $1,750–$3,500. Maintaining your closing timeline is the cleanest way to avoid this cost entirely.

Chris Johnson | Associate Broker | Affinity Mortgage | NMLS #235072 | Affinity Mortgage NMLS #252576 | 2542 S Bascom Ave, Suite 185, Campbell, CA 95008 | Equal Housing Lender.

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a commitment to lend. Loan approval is subject to credit approval and program guidelines. Interest rates and program terms are subject to change without notice. Rate examples are for illustrative purposes only and do not represent a quote or guarantee of any specific rate. Sources: Fortune/Optimal Blue, Bankrate, Freddie Mac — May 27, 2026. Not a solicitation if you are already represented by a real estate professional.

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Chris Johnson picture
Chris Johnson picture

Chris Johnson

Associate Broker

Affinity Mortgage | NMLS: 235072

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