President Trump’s proposal for a national 50-year mortgage has sparked a lot of debate about affordability. On the surface, spreading payments over a longer timeline seems like it should make buying a home easier. Monthly payments go down, which helps, but the tradeoffs are real.
Every financial tool has pros and cons. There is no one-size-fits-all answer. This story breaks down how a 50-year mortgage works, how it may affect the real estate market and how to determine whether it is a good fit for your situation.
How a 50-year mortgage works
The biggest difference is time. You have 50 years to repay the loan, instead of 30 or 15. The monthly payment goes down, but not by much.
On a $410,000 home with 20% down, the mortgage is $328,000.
- A 30-year loan at 6.3%: $2,030 per month
- A 50-year loan at the same rate: $1,800 per month
- Savings: $230 per month
The long-term cost is high. You would pay $348,974 more in interest. The total you would pay over time comes to $751,857.
Lower payments also slow down how fast you build equity. Mortgage interest is front-loaded. For years, most of your payment goes to interest, not principal.
On a 30-year mortgage at 4%, you do not meaningfully start paying down the principal until around year 13. On a 50-year mortgage, that takes even longer.
This increases the risk of becoming upside down if home values fall, which is already happening in many parts of the country.
If that happens, you may not be able to sell without a short sale or foreclosure. A 50-year mortgage can help someone qualify for a home, but it also brings real risk.
How it could change the housing market
A 50-year mortgage would let more buyers qualify.
That sounds positive, but more buyers also means more competition. When demand rises faster than supply, prices go up. We already saw that when interest rates were around 2 to 3%. Buyers flooded the market and prices climbed fast.
This would be similar. Buyers who need a 50-year mortgage often bring smaller down payments and have less financial room to absorb surprises. They are also more likely to overbid and stretch their budgets.
Something similar happened in the auto industry when lenders introduced five-year and ten-year loans. These loans made cars seem more affordable at first.
Over time, prices rose a lot. The same outcome will likely happen in housing. The people who need the most help could end up hurt the most.
Is a 50-year mortgage right for you?
If you read TBBW, you are already financially savvy. Even so, this is still a math decision.
When you buy real estate with a loan, you buy at today’s price but repay with tomorrow’s dollars.
Inflation reduces the value of money over time, which can work in your favor if the deal is strong. Property values also tend to rise over long periods.
For a primary home, the math is simple. You have to live somewhere and housing always has a cost. A mortgage can lock that cost in. Rent does not.
For an investment property, you must look at all the numbers. You also need to know if rents can stay strong.
You need to know if jobs are growing or shrinking and if property values look stable. A deal that looks good today can fall apart if the area cannot support market rents.
A 50-year mortgage may work in some cases. In many cases, creative finance or seller finance may offer greater flexibility.
Takeaway
A 50-year mortgage is not good or bad on its own. It is a tool. It lowers monthly payments but increases total cost. It slows equity and brings more risk.
For the right buyer, it may open doors. For others, it may create strain. Either way, it is another option to explore when you want to buy real estate, hedge inflation and build long-term wealth.
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