Every time interest rates move, the headlines follow. Rates are up. Rates are down. Now is the time to buy. Now is the time to wait. The noise is constant and most of it is written for a national audience that has nothing to do with where you live.
South Florida is not a national market. It behaves differently, attracts a different buyer pool, and responds to rate changes in ways that don’t always match what you’re reading in the news. So let’s talk about what’s actually happening here — and what it means for you depending on where you sit.
“The rate is one number. What it does to your life depends entirely on your situation.”
What higher rates actually do to a purchase
The most direct impact of a higher interest rate is on your monthly payment. A one percent increase on a $500,000 mortgage adds roughly $300 to $320 per month. Over the life of the loan, that is a significant number. But the monthly payment is only part of the picture.
Higher rates also affect how much house you qualify for. If your lender pre-approved you at a certain rate and that rate has since moved, your purchasing power has moved with it. Not dramatically in most cases, but enough to push certain properties out of reach or change the conversation about how much to put down.
What rates don’t do is stop people from moving. Life doesn’t pause for the Fed. Jobs change, families grow, leases end, and estates get settled. The people buying and selling in South Florida right now are doing it because they need to, not because the rate environment is ideal.
What it means if you’re thinking about buying
The buyers who are struggling most right now are those who were already at the edge of their budgets when rates were lower. If you have flexibility in your price range, the current environment is actually creating opportunities that didn’t exist a year ago. Less competition. More negotiating room. Sellers who have been sitting on the market longer than expected are more willing to have a real conversation.
The question to ask yourself is not whether rates are good or bad. It’s whether the payment works for your life right now and whether you’re buying something you intend to hold long enough for the market to do what it has always done in South Florida over time.
If the answer to both is yes, waiting for rates to drop is a gamble on a timeline nobody controls. If rates fall, prices tend to rise as demand returns. You may end up paying less per month and more for the house.
What it means if you’re thinking about selling
Higher rates have cooled the frenzy. The multiple-offer situations that defined the market two to three years ago are less common. Buyers are taking more time, asking more questions, and walking away from deals that don’t pencil out. That means the way a home is priced, presented, and marketed matters more than it did when demand was outrunning supply.
Sellers who priced in 2022 and are still holding that number in 2026 are the ones sitting longest. The market has given clear feedback. Listening to it early is always less expensive than listening to it late.
The sellers doing well right now are the ones who came in priced correctly from day one, with a home that showed well and an agent who knew how to put it in front of the right buyers. That combination is working. The alternative is a slow bleed of price reductions that signals to the market that something is wrong, even when nothing is.
What it means if you’re a landlord or tenant
Higher purchase rates keep more people renting longer. People who would have bought last year or the year before are still in the rental market because the math on buying doesn’t work for them yet. That sustained demand has kept rental prices in South Florida elevated even as the purchase market has softened.
For landlords, that’s generally favorable news, but it comes with its own pressures. Stretched tenants are less likely to absorb large rent increases at renewal. The landlords holding their best tenants right now are the ones who understand that a small rent concession is almost always cheaper than a vacancy, a new tenant search, and the time it takes to get back to full occupancy.
For tenants, the negotiating environment has shifted slightly in your favor compared to a year ago, especially in buildings and complexes with higher vacancy. If you’re renewing, it’s worth having the conversation before you assume the number on the renewal notice is final.
The part the headlines leave out
Interest rates are a factor. They are not the whole story. In South Florida, international buyers purchasing in cash represent a significant share of the market and are unaffected by domestic interest rate changes. New construction continues. Migration into the region continues. The fundamentals that have driven this market for the last decade have not changed.
What has changed is the pace. The urgency. The willingness of buyers to stretch beyond what is comfortable. That correction was probably necessary. It has created a market that requires more knowledge, more patience, and more honest conversations than the one that existed when everything was moving in one direction.
That market is harder to navigate alone. It’s also, for the right buyer or seller, full of opportunities that weren’t there before.


