Waiting for Prices to Drop? New Research Says You'll Be Waiting 7 Years
A lot of buyers right now are in a holding pattern, watching the market and waiting for prices to come down.
Oxford Economics just put a number on how long that wait might actually be: seven years.
That projection comes from one of the most widely cited economic research firms in the world. If you're in Northern NJ wondering whether to keep waiting or start moving, you’ll want to understand what that timeline really means for you.
This is a look at the math behind the "wait and see" strategy, so you can make a decision based on the full picture.
What "Housing Affordability" Actually Means
When people say they're waiting for housing to become "more affordable," they usually mean they're waiting for prices to drop.
But home prices are just one piece of the housing affordability puzzle.
Home prices: what sellers are asking and what buyers are paying
Mortgage rates: which determine how much of your monthly payment goes to interest
Income: how much purchasing power buyers actually have
All three have to move in the right direction for affordability to improve in a meaningful way.
Prices could flatten while rates stay elevated, and a buyer's monthly payment barely budges. Or rates could drop while prices climb in response to increased demand, and the monthly cost lands in roughly the same place.
Oxford Economics' seven-year projection accounts for how all these factors interact, and what it would realistically take for housing costs to come back in line with what a typical household can afford to spend.
What Oxford Economics Is Projecting
Oxford Economics' research, published in June 2026, projects that housing affordability won't see meaningful recovery for at least seven years. That puts a realistic improvement timeline somewhere around 2033.
For context, Oxford Economics is a global research firm whose economic modeling is used by governments and major financial institutions worldwide. When they put a seven-year number on the affordability recovery, it's not a guess.
The projection reflects what it would take to close the gap between where home prices and borrowing costs are now and where they'd need to be for a typical buyer to comfortably afford a median-priced home.
Getting there would require meaningful price corrections alongside sustained rate decreases and real income growth, and researchers don't expect those conditions to align anytime soon.
Example: Local Market Stats for Livingston, NJ (May 2026)
Median home sale price: $1.49m
Avg days on market: 26
List price to sale price ratio: 101%
The Real Cost of Waiting
Waiting feels like a neutral decision. But every year a buyer stays on the sidelines, two things are working against them.
Equity. Every month a homeowner makes a mortgage payment, a portion of that goes toward building ownership in an asset.
Rent. Rent payments don't build equity, and rent prices haven't been trending down. The average renter is paying more today than they were two years ago.
A lot of buyers are counting on rates dropping. But if mortgage rates fall significantly before 2033, more buyers come off the sidelines, demand goes up, and in a market with limited inventory, prices tend to follow.
The monthly payment might not drop the way buyers are hoping, even with a lower rate, if the purchase price has climbed to meet the demand.
The "waiting for affordability to improve" strategy has real costs attached to it, and it’s good to know those costs before making a decision.
You need the full picture of housing costs for the rent vs buy question in the town you're considering, and that means taking a closer look, not just at the local numbers, but specifically at your unique financial situation and the costs of becoming a homeowner in 2026.
If no one has walked you through the numbers to help you understand the most financially beneficial decision for your household this year, that’s what me and my team are here for.
Make the Decision with the Full Picture
The Oxford Economics projection is a data point that belongs in the conversation when you're thinking through your timeline.
Seven years is a long time to wait for conditions that may or may not arrive on schedule.
If you're considering Livingston, Millburn/Short Hills, Summit, or any of the surrounding towns and you've been holding off, I'd encourage you to look at what the next few years realistically look like with the full numbers in front of you.