Finance

Buying a Home Before 30 Can Boost Net Worth by $119K

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Buying a home has long been a lucrative wealth-building strategy, but new data shows how much first-time buyers can benefit from buying early.

Americans who bought their first home at age 30 saw a 22.5% increase in their value by age 50, compared to those who waited until age 40, according to a Realtor.com report released Thursday. The benefit — which the authors refer to as a “wealth multiplier” — translates to a net worth of $119,000 on average.

Everything boils down to time in the market, experts say.

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“By having more years of appreciation and mortgage payments, first-time buyers are building a foundation of wealth that supports opportunities for the next generation,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist at Realtor.com, in a statement about the report.

In other words, the earlier you buy a home, the more time you have to build equity in it and enjoy the benefits of appreciation. However, not all the so-called “wealth multiplier” comes from the home itself. The report also notes that owning a home provides a degree of financial stability that supports savings and investments elsewhere, contributing to capital gains.

Age to buy first home

The extra money is priced at age 50

Increase in nominal value (in dollars)

28 out of 32

22.5%

$119,000

33 out of 37

11.2%

$59,000

38 out of 42

1.5%

$8,000

43 out of 52

0%

$0

The truth about buying a home at 30

For decades, buying a home at age 30 or earlier was the norm. These days, it’s a better situation for most Americans.

According to the National Association of Realtors, or NAR, the average age of a first-time home buyer is now 40 years old. In the 1990s and most of the 2000s, first-time buyers were often in their 30s.

Then the COVID-19 pandemic devastated the housing market, driving up prices almost overnight… and driving out a lot of small buyers. They now face a very different home buying reality than previous generations.

In 1990, the median home price was $96,800, while the median household income was $31,000, a ratio of about 3-to-1, according to Realtor.com. Home prices are now $418,000, and incomes are $85,000, by a ratio of nearly 5-to-1.

A separate study from Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies found that the price-to-income ratio for buying a home has reached record highs recently.

“Because housing prices are so high relative to household incomes, consumers need to save more and longer to get a down payment,” research analyst Peyton Whitney wrote in the group’s October report. “Low down payments are already a significant barrier to homeownership, especially for first-time buyers, young people, and households of color.”

Today it takes the average family about 10 years to save enough for a down payment, while it took just over three years to do so in the 1990s, according to a report by Realtor.com.

“Home ownership has long been one of the most reliable ways for families to build and pass on wealth,” said Damian Eales, CEO of Realtor.com, in a statement. “But today, many young people are stuck on the sidelines because buying a home has become unaffordable.”

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