Chicago Sun-Times

For millennial­s, buying a home by age 35 is worth it now — and later

- BY BETH BUCZYNSKI

Nicole Christians­on, a 26-year-old sales rep, was tired of writing big checks for tiny apartments. And she wanted to do more with her cash than stash it in a savings account.

One night, she and her husband Thure, 28, took a look at their newly combined finances and uncovered a pleasant surprise: Together, they had saved enough for a 5 percent down payment on the affordable fixer-upper right across the street from their Milwaukee apartment. They closed in December 2017, and Nicole Christians­on says they’re happy to finally be “making something that’s ours.”

Millennial­s’ homeowners­hip goals

Many in Christians­on’s age group are chasing that feeling. Eighty-two percent of young adults say owning a home is a priority, according to NerdWallet’s 2018 Home Buyer Report. If they can make it happen, most will be firsttime homebuyers, but that ‘if ’ looms large.

Millennial­s (those born from 1981 to 1997) are buying houses at lower rates than when previous generation­s were the same age, and it’s not hard to see why. Saving up for a down payment and qualifying for a mortgage can feel like pipe dreams for young adults grappling with student debt, underemplo­yment and high rent costs.

Still, millennial­s are a optimistic lot, and research shows there are big rewards in store for those who find a way to buy their first home sooner rather than later.

How buying young can pay off later

Of today’s older adults, those who bought their first home from ages 25 to 34 accumulate­d the most housing wealth by their 60s — a median of around $150,000, according to a report by the Urban Institute, a nonprofit research organizati­on.

In contrast, the median housing wealth for those in their early 60s who bought later (ages 35 to 44), was about half as much, at $76,000. Homeowners who bought after they were 45 had about $44,000 in housing wealth by their 60s.

“Housing wealth” is another term for equity, which is the difference between the home’s market value and an owner’s mortgage balance. Equity becomes profit when a home is sold or refinanced, and it’s more likely to grow the longer one owns the home.

The takeaway for millennial­s? Buy a home as early as you can feasibly do so, says Laurie Goodman, vice president of housing finance policy at the Urban Institute.

Paying rent to yourself is a top perk of homeowners­hip, Goodman says. “It’s also forced savings in the sense that you’re paying down a mortgage each month. Yes, you could put away the same amount of money in a savings plan, but people don’t.”

Loans and programs boost affordabil­ity

Certain mortgage options can reduce the upfront costs of buying a home, allowing borrowers to qualify with far less than the traditiona­l 20 percent down payment.

“We wanted to go with a VA lender,” says Marissa Avila, 33, a self-employed smallbusin­ess consultant in Norfolk, Virginia. Her husband Greg, 36, is in the Navy, so they were eligible for a loan guaranteed by the Department of Veterans Affairs and bought with no down payment.

Low down payment loans aren’t just for borrowers in uniform: Some convention­al loans require just 3 percent down, the minimum for a Federal Housing Administra­tion mortgage is 3.5 percent and eligible borrowers can get a Department of Agricultur­e, or USDA, loan with nothing down.

Talking to a lender can be a good step if you’re not sure that you’re ready, Avila says.

“The worst that someone is going to say is ‘No, you need to save a little bit more money,’ and then you know where you stand,” she says. “It’s so much easier once you finally start that conversati­on.”

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC/AP FILE ?? Even if it’s a stretch now, buying your first home by age 35 can mean more wealth in retirement.
KEITH SRAKOCIC/AP FILE Even if it’s a stretch now, buying your first home by age 35 can mean more wealth in retirement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States