The external benchmark many ARMs use to calculate future rate changes.
Index rate is the external benchmark used in many adjustable-rate mortgages to help determine future interest-rate changes.
Index rate matters because many ARM borrowers focus on the starting payment and overlook how future rate adjustments are actually calculated.
It also matters because the loan’s future rate does not float randomly. The index is one of the structured inputs that help determine how the ARM can change over time.
The term also matters because borrowers sometimes assume the lender can simply choose any future rate it wants. In a standard ARM, the loan documents name the benchmark and the adjustment framework instead of leaving that decision open-ended.
Borrowers usually encounter the index-rate concept when comparing Adjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM) structures or reading the ARM disclosures more carefully.
The term becomes especially important when the borrower wants to understand what drives future payment changes after the initial fixed period ends and why one ARM structure may behave differently from another.
| Term | What it controls |
|---|---|
| Index rate | The outside benchmark feeding the ARM reset formula |
| Margin | The loan-specific add-on to that benchmark |
| Fully Indexed Rate | The combined rate result before caps or floors limit the outcome |
| ARM Reset | The borrower-facing event when the loan rate is reviewed and potentially changed |
A borrower selects an ARM and later learns that future rate changes are tied in part to an external benchmark named in the loan terms rather than to a discretionary lender choice. That benchmark is the index rate.
Index rate differs from Margin because the index is the external benchmark, while the margin is the loan-specific amount added to that benchmark under the loan terms.
It also differs from Fully Indexed Rate. The fully indexed rate is the resulting rate concept after the index and margin are combined.
It also differs from Rate Cap. The index is part of the adjustment formula, while the cap limits how far the rate can move even if the formula would otherwise imply a larger change.