APOR Calculate
APOR Lookup & History
Frequently Asked Questions
What APOR is, how the rate spread works, and what HPML and high-cost thresholds mean for you
APOR, the Average Prime Offer Rate, is a weekly benchmark rate published by the federal government that represents what a borrower with strong credit would be offered on a low-risk mortgage.
It is calculated by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) from survey data on actual rates, points, and terms offered to prime borrowers, and a fresh set of APOR values is published every week for several loan types and terms. Think of it as the “going market rate” for the safest loans.
Lenders compare your loan’s APR to APOR to see how far above that benchmark your loan sits. That gap — the rate spread — is what determines whether your loan triggers extra consumer-protection rules.
Your rate spread is simply your loan’s APR minus the APOR for a comparable loan on the day your rate was locked: rate spread = APR − APOR.
Example: if your loan’s APR is 8.0% and the APOR for that loan type and term is 6.3%, your rate spread is 1.7 percentage points.
| Your APR | APOR that week | Rate spread | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7.50% | 6.30% | 1.20 | Standard loan |
| 8.00% | 6.30% | 1.70 | HPML (over 1.5) |
| 9.50% | 6.30% | 3.20 | HPML |
Two details matter: the APOR used is the one in effect on the date you locked your rate (not your closing date), and it must be matched to a loan of the same type and term as yours.
A Higher-Priced Mortgage Loan is one whose APR exceeds the APOR by more than a set number of percentage points — 1.5 for a typical first mortgage. It is a regulatory label, not a judgment that the loan is bad.
Under Regulation Z, the thresholds are:
| Loan type | APR exceeds APOR by |
|---|---|
| First-lien, conforming | 1.5 percentage points or more |
| First-lien, jumbo (above the conforming limit) | 2.5 points or more |
| Subordinate lien (2nd mortgage) | 3.5 points or more |
If your rate spread lands at or above the line for your loan type, the loan is an HPML and a handful of borrower protections automatically apply (see the next question).
HPML status triggers extra safeguards designed to protect you — mainly a required escrow account, a stricter appraisal, and a documented ability-to-repay review.
- Escrow account — the lender must collect property taxes and homeowners insurance with your payment for at least the first 5 years, so those bills don’t catch you off guard.
- Full appraisal with interior inspection — a licensed appraiser must physically inspect the home, and in some flip situations a second appraisal is required, at the lender’s expense.
- Ability-to-repay verification — the lender must document that you can actually afford the loan.
A high-cost mortgage (under HOEPA) is a step beyond an HPML — it carries a much larger rate spread or very high fees, and it brings far stronger restrictions.
The APR-based trigger is higher than HPML:
| Loan type | APR exceeds APOR by |
|---|---|
| First-lien | more than 6.5 points |
| Subordinate lien / smaller loans | more than 8.5 points |
A loan can also be high-cost based on total points and fees, or certain prepayment penalties. High-cost loans require homeownership counseling and ban features like balloon payments and most prepayment penalties. Most well-structured purchase and refinance loans never come close to these thresholds.
No — APOR is the same number for every loan program. The CFPB publishes one APOR per week for each amortization type (fixed or adjustable) and term, with no separate FHA, VA, or conventional value.
What changes by program is not the benchmark but the threshold the rate spread is measured against:
| Test | Threshold over APOR | Applies to |
|---|---|---|
| HPML — escrow & appraisal (Reg Z) | 1.5 first-lien · 2.5 jumbo · 3.5 subordinate | All programs, incl. FHA |
| FHA QM safe harbor | 1.15 + annual MIP | FHA only |
| General QM safe harbor | 1.5 first-lien | Conventional / VA / USDA |
FHA gets the extra room (1.15 plus the annual MIP) on purpose: HUD didn’t want the mortgage insurance premium alone to push an ordinary FHA loan into “higher-priced” territory. So a 30-year fixed has the same APOR whether it’s FHA or conventional — only the pass/fail line moves. The tool above lets you pick the program to see both determinations.
APOR is the market benchmark for the best borrowers; APR is the all-in cost of your specific loan. The rate spread is the distance between them.
| APOR | APR | |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | Weekly benchmark rate for prime loans | Your loan’s rate plus its fees, as a yearly cost |
| Set by | The CFPB, published weekly | Your lender, based on your loan |
| Used for | The yardstick for HPML / high-cost rules | Comparing the true cost of loan offers |
To understand the APR side of the equation, use our APR calculator, which shows how points and fees push your APR above your note rate.
Not necessarily. A higher spread usually reflects added risk or cost factors — credit score, loan type, or fees — not a lender taking advantage of you.
Spreads run higher for things like lower credit scores, smaller down payments, investment properties, or loans with points rolled in. The spread is a useful flag to ask questions about, not an automatic red light. The honest move is to compare a couple of real offers side by side and look at the full cost, not just one number.
Use the lookup tool at the top of this page — pick your rate-lock date, fixed or adjustable, and loan term, and it instantly shows the APOR the CFPB published that week, with full history back to 2017.
To turn that into a rate spread, enter your loan’s APR in the tool and it shows the spread (APR − APOR) and whether the loan would be a Higher-Priced Mortgage Loan. Because APOR is set weekly and must match your loan type, term, and lock date, the date picker handles that matching for you.
You lower the spread by lowering your APR relative to the benchmark — usually through a stronger credit profile, fewer financed fees, or a different loan structure.
- Improve your credit score before locking — even a small bump can move your rate.
- Reduce points and financed fees, which inflate APR (and therefore the spread).
- Put more down or choose a different program — higher-risk profiles carry higher rates.
- Shop offers — a lower rate or lower fees from a competitive lender directly shrinks the spread.
Even if a loan does end up as an HPML, remember the protections work in your favor — it is not something you must avoid at all costs.
No. APOR is an average benchmark for the strongest borrowers; your actual rate depends on your credit, down payment, loan type, and the market on your lock day.
Your offered rate may be very close to APOR (strong file, low risk) or noticeably above it (lower credit, higher-risk loan, financed costs). APOR is the measuring stick the rules use — not a quote. For a real, personalized rate, talk to us and we will price your scenario.
Here are the primary federal sources behind APOR, the rate spread, and the higher-priced rules — straight from the CFPB and FFIEC, so you can verify anything yourself.
- FFIEC Rate Spread Calculator — the official government tool that returns the APOR and rate spread for a specific loan. This is the system of record for HMDA and compliance.
- CFPB: What is a higher-priced mortgage loan? — the CFPB’s plain-English explainer of HPMLs and what triggers them.
- CFPB: What is a Qualified Mortgage? — how QM safe-harbor and rebuttable-presumption status work, which is where the FHA threshold comes in.
- Regulation Z, 12 CFR 1026.35 (eCFR) — the actual federal regulation that defines higher-priced mortgage loans and the escrow and appraisal protections.
- CFPB: Interest rate vs. APR — the difference between your note rate and your APR, which is what gets compared to APOR.
- FFIEC APOR yield tables (adjustable) — the raw published weekly APOR values that the lookup tool on this page reads directly.
For your specific loan, we are happy to pull the APOR and walk through the spread with you — just reach out.
Not sure what your rate spread means for your loan? We'll pull the APOR and explain it in plain English.
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