Current Prime Rate: 6.75% (March 2026)

Live U.S. prime rate, recent rate changes, bank-by-bank rates, and FOMC outlook

Get your rate in minutes

No credit score impact

Borrow up to $500,000+

Current Prime Rate

What Is the Prime Rate Today?

LA
Laura Adams
MBA, Financial Writer
|  Reviewed by Offain Gunasekara  |  Last Updated: March 2026

Current U.S. Prime Rate

6.75%

Effective Date

Dec 11, 2025

Last Change

↓ −0.25%

Fed Funds Rate

3.50% – 3.75%

Next FOMC Meeting

May 6–7, 2026

Source: Federal Reserve H.15 Release  |  Prime = Fed Funds Upper Bound + 3.00%

The current U.S. prime rate is 6.75%, effective December 11, 2025, after the Federal Reserve cut the federal funds rate by 0.25% to a target range of 3.50%–3.75%. This was the fifth consecutive cut since September 2024, bringing prime down from 8.50%. The next FOMC meeting is May 6–7, 2026, where markets expect the Fed to hold rates steady.

Key Facts

  • Current prime rate: 6.75% (effective December 11, 2025)
  • Previous prime rate: 7.00% (October 31 – December 10, 2025)
  • Federal funds rate: 3.50%–3.75% target range
  • Formula: Prime rate = Fed funds rate upper bound (3.75%) + 3.00% = 6.75%
  • Rate trend: Five cuts totaling 1.75% since September 2024 (prime fell from 8.50% to 6.75%)
  • Next decision: May 6–7, 2026 FOMC meeting. Markets price ~85% probability of hold.

Today’s Prime Rate Explained

The prime rate at 6.75% means that the nation’s largest banks charge their most creditworthy corporate customers 6.75% for short-term operating loans. For consumers and small businesses, the prime rate is a benchmark — your actual rate is prime plus a margin based on your credit profile. The CFPB explains that the margin depends on the product type and your creditworthiness.

At 6.75% prime, here is what you are paying right now:

  • Credit cards: 18.75%–29.75% APR (prime + 12%–23% margin). The average is 20.97% per Federal Reserve G.19 data.
  • HELOCs: 7.25%–8.75% APR (prime + 0.5%–2%).
  • SBA 7(a) loans: 9.00%–11.50% APR (prime + 2.25%–4.75%). See SBA rate caps.
  • Adjustable-rate mortgages: 6.75%–7.75% APR (prime + 0%–1%).
  • Business lines of credit: 7.8%–25% APR depending on lender and credit.

Use the Prime Rate Impact Calculator to see the exact effect on your specific loan balance.

Interest rate trend chart showing prime rate movement

Prime Rate by Bank

The Wall Street Journal prime rate is based on a survey of the 30 largest U.S. banks. In practice, all major banks post the same prime rate because it is mechanically tied to the federal funds rate. As of March 2026:

Prime rates as of March 2026. All major banks post the WSJ prime rate.
BankPrime RateEffective Date
JPMorgan Chase6.75%Dec 11, 2025
Bank of America6.75%Dec 11, 2025
Wells Fargo6.75%Dec 11, 2025
Citibank6.75%Dec 11, 2025
U.S. Bank6.75%Dec 11, 2025
PNC Financial6.75%Dec 11, 2025
Goldman Sachs6.75%Dec 11, 2025
TD Bank6.75%Dec 11, 2025

While the WSJ prime rate is uniform across major banks, some smaller community banks and credit unions may post a slightly different rate. These differences are typically 0.25% or less and apply only to specific local products. For consumer and small business lending, the 6.75% WSJ prime rate is the standard benchmark used by virtually all lenders nationwide.

💡 Pro Tip: Your credit card statement shows your APR as “prime + X%” or just the total APR. To find your margin, subtract 6.75% from your current APR. If your card charges 22.75%, your margin is 16.00%. This margin stays fixed — only the prime component changes when the Fed acts. Track what each 0.25% move means for your balance with the Prime Rate Credit Card Calculator.

Recent Rate Changes Timeline

The Fed has cut rates five times since September 2024, each time reducing prime by the same amount. Here is the complete timeline of the current easing cycle, based on FRED historical data:

FOMC DateFed ActionFed Funds RatePrime RateChange
Dec 10, 2025↓ Cut 0.25%3.50%–3.75%6.75%↓ 0.25%
Oct 29, 2025↓ Cut 0.25%3.75%–4.00%7.00%↓ 0.25%
Jun 11, 2025↓ Cut 0.25%4.00%–4.25%7.25%↓ 0.25%
Nov 7, 2024↓ Cut 0.25%4.25%–4.50%7.50%↓ 0.25%
Sep 18, 2024↓ Cut 0.50%4.50%–4.75%8.00%↓ 0.50%
Jul 2023 (last hike)↑ Raise 0.25%5.25%–5.50%8.50%↑ 0.25%

For the complete history back to 1980, see our Prime Rate History page and the interactive Prime Rate Forecast Calculator.

How Today’s 6.75% Rate Affects You

The drop from 8.50% to 6.75% since September 2024 has reduced borrowing costs across every variable-rate product. Here is the dollar impact on common loan balances:

Savings from the 1.75% prime rate drop (8.50% → 6.75%) since Sep 2024.
ProductBalanceOld Rate (8.50% prime)New Rate (6.75% prime)Annual Savings
Credit card (prime+16%)$5,00024.50%22.75%$88/yr
HELOC (prime+1%)$80,0009.50%7.75%$1,400/yr
SBA 7(a) (prime+2.75%)$200,00011.25%9.50%$3,500/yr
ARM (prime+0.5%)$350,0009.00%7.25%$6,125/yr
Business LOC (prime+8%)$50,00016.50%14.75%$875/yr

Model your exact savings with the Prime Rate Impact Calculator or compare variable vs fixed rates using the Variable vs Fixed Rate Calculator.

💡 Pro Tip: If you have a HELOC or SBA loan, check whether your lender adjusted your rate after the December 2025 cut. Some lenders update on the first of the month following the change; others adjust on your next statement cycle. If your rate has not dropped by 0.25% since December, call your lender — you may be owed a retroactive adjustment. The CFPB can assist if your lender does not comply with your loan’s rate adjustment terms.

What Happens Next: FOMC Outlook

The Federal Reserve’s next rate decision comes at the May 6–7, 2026 FOMC meeting. Based on CME FedWatch probabilities and FOMC dot-plot projections:

May 6–7, 2026: Markets price ~85% probability of hold. Inflation data from Q1 2026 will be the deciding factor. If core PCE remains above 2.5%, the Fed holds. Prime stays at 6.75%.

June 17–18, 2026: The first meeting where a cut is meaningfully priced in (~40% probability). If economic data softens, a 0.25% cut would bring prime to 6.50%.

Second half 2026: FOMC meetings on July 29–30, September 16–17, October 28–29, and December 16–17. Consensus forecast expects 1–2 cuts total in H2, potentially bringing prime to 6.25%–6.50% by year-end.

What this means for borrowers: If you are considering a variable-rate product (HELOC, SBA loan, business LOC), the direction of rates is favorable — prime is more likely to fall than rise in 2026. If you lock a fixed rate now, you may miss further savings. But if inflation resurges, the Fed could pause or even reverse course. Read our full analysis: Prime Rate Forecast 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the current prime rate today?

The current U.S. prime rate is 6.75% as of March 2026, effective December 11, 2025. It equals the federal funds rate upper bound (3.75%) plus 3.00%. The rate is published by the Wall Street Journal based on a survey of the 30 largest U.S. banks.

When did the prime rate last change?

The prime rate last changed on December 11, 2025, dropping 0.25% from 7.00% to 6.75%. This followed the Fed’s fifth consecutive rate cut since September 2024. The previous change was October 31, 2025 (from 7.25% to 7.00%).

When will the prime rate change again?

The next opportunity is the May 6–7, 2026 FOMC meeting, but markets expect the Fed to hold. The first likely cut is at the June 17–18 meeting (~40% probability). Prime changes only when the Fed adjusts the federal funds rate.

Is the prime rate the same at every bank?

Effectively yes. All 30 banks surveyed by the Wall Street Journal post the same prime rate of 6.75%. Some smaller community banks may deviate by 0.25%, but for consumer and business lending purposes, the WSJ prime rate is the universal standard.

How does the prime rate affect my credit card?

Most credit card APRs equal prime + a fixed margin (12%–23%). At 6.75% prime with a 16% margin, your APR is 22.75%. When prime dropped 1.75% from 8.50%, a $5,000 balance saved about $88/year in interest. Changes appear on your next billing statement.

What is the relationship between the prime rate and the federal funds rate?

Prime rate = federal funds rate upper bound + 3.00%. This 3-point spread has held since 1994. When the FOMC raises or lowers the fed funds rate, banks adjust prime by the same amount within one business day. The current fed funds target is 3.50%–3.75%, making prime 6.75%.

Related Resources

References

Calculators

Advertiser Disclosure: PrimeRates.com may receive compensation from lenders when you click through and complete an application. This does not affect our editorial objectivity or rankings. Financial Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Rates and terms are subject to change. Consult a licensed financial professional before making borrowing decisions.

Ready to get pre-qualified for a business loan?