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The True Cost of Owning a Home: What Buyers Need to Know

Lena Pesso

It’s been 10+ years for me in the real estate business. I love it ❤️...

It’s been 10+ years for me in the real estate business. I love it ❤️...

Jan 10 6 minutes read

Most buyers spend months preparing to get approved for a mortgage. They obsess over rates, run payment calculators, and watch listings like a hawk. 

Then they close, get the keys, and are hit with a completely different financial reality.

And it’s not because they did anything wrong. It’s because most homeownership advice still focuses on getting to the closing table, not staying comfortable after you get there.

That’s a mistake. And it’s costing buyers in more ways than one. 

The good news? 

This is completely fixable with the right planning. And buyers who think ahead tend to feel far more confident after closing.

If you’re planning to buy this year, the smartest move isn’t just getting to the closing table. It’s setting yourself up to stay comfortable once you’re there.



Mortgage-Ready Isn’t the Same as Ownership-Ready

Getting approved tells you what a lender is willing to finance. It doesn’t always reflect what your monthly life will feel like once taxes, insurance, and maintenance are part of the picture.

Instead of waiting around for a perfect rate, it’s smarter to get clear on a monthly payment range you’re genuinely comfortable with. Small rate changes often matter less than buyers expect, especially when other housing costs keep rising.

One of the most useful planning steps you can take is talking with a lender early. Not just for pre-approval, but to understand how your income, savings, and spending patterns are evaluated. Those conversations give you time to adjust and plan before you’re under pressure to make quick decisions.



The Down Payment Is Only the First Milestone

Saving for a down payment is still one of the biggest obstacles to homeownership.

Nationally, it now takes about seven years for a typical household to save for a typical down payment. That’s better than the 2022 peak of roughly 12 years, but it’s still about double what was normal before the pandemic.

A few things are keeping timelines longer than many buyers expect:

  • The personal savings rate has averaged about 5.1%, below the pre-pandemic norm of 6.5%.
  • Typical down payments have more than doubled, rising from about $13,900 in 2019 to roughly $30,400 in 2025.
  • Everyday expenses continue to compete with long-term savings goals.

Hitting your down payment goal is a huge win. It’s just not the final one. Planning for what comes after that milestone is what keeps ownership feeling manageable.



The Costs That Show Up After Closing

A lot of buyers treat their mortgage payment as the finish line. In reality, it’s the starting point.

Once you own the home, there are several ongoing costs that sit on top of the loan payment. Planning for them upfront makes the experience far less stressful:

  • Homeowners insurance, which has climbed nearly 70% since 2021 and is still rising.
  • Property taxes, which can jump after a purchase when assessments reset.
  • Maintenance and repairs, which experts now estimate at closer to 2% to 4% of a home’s value each year.
  • HOA dues and special assessments, when applicable, which can change quickly.

When you add these together, typical non-mortgage housing costs can run anywhere from about $1,400 to $3,750 per month, depending on the home’s price, age, and location. 

That number catches a lot of buyers off guard. But when planned for upfront, these costs are far less stressful.



Why Insurance, Taxes, and Maintenance Matter More in 2026

Some ownership costs have become less predictable, which makes planning even more valuable.

Insurance premiums are seeing annual increases of 8% to 10% in many areas, even for homeowners who’ve never filed a claim.

Property taxes can also surprise buyers, especially when taxable values reset after a sale. You shouldn’t assume your future tax bill will look anything like what the current owner pays.

Maintenance is often underestimated because it isn’t consistent. You might go years with minimal costs, then suddenly face a $10,000 repair when a major system reaches the end of its life.

Planning for these realities doesn’t mean expecting the worst. It means building in buffers so you have options when something does come up.



Preparing for Ownership, Not Just Approval

Strong preparation isn’t about stretching to the maximum payment a lender allows. It’s about building breathing room.

That might look like:

  • Keeping cash reserves beyond your down payment
  • Choosing a payment that leaves flexibility in your monthly budget
  • Understanding trade-offs before you’re under contract, not after

Buyers who plan this way tend to feel calmer, more confident, and less reactive when the unexpected happens.



The Real Goal: Staying Comfortable After the Keys Are Handed Over

Buying a home is a big milestone. But staying financially comfortable in it is the real win.

The buyers who do well in 2026 are the ones who understand the full cost of ownership. They also plan for it early and make decisions with the long term in mind.


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