Today’s Buyers Wouldn’t Have Wanted to Buy in 1981

The typical single-family home was considered cheap in the 1980s, but baby boomers had it worse with mortgage rates reaching 18% in the fall of 1981.

1 MIN READ

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While today’s home buying environment is uncomfortable for most, baby boomers had it much worse in the 1980s, according to a recent analysis from Realtor.com.

The typical single-family home cost just $66,125—about six times less than the cost this past May, according to the most recent data from NAR.

However, the typical household was bringing in only about $19,074 in 1981, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. And mortgage rates topped 18% that fall. (And you thought 7% was rough.)

Those turbo-sized rates meant that 99.5% of a buyer’s first year of mortgage payments was going toward just the towering amount of interest on the loan. The buyer didn’t pay down 10% on the principal of the balance until the 18th year of the loan, assuming the buyer didn’t refinance—which most buyers did. (This calculation includes a 20% down payment.)

Today’s average family is earning about $73,505 a year. But in May, they were contending with median existing-home prices of $410,100 and mortgage rates hovering in the mid-6% range and which have since risen to the high 6% territory. About 85% of their first year’s mortgage payments is going to interest.

One important difference is that instead of waiting nearly two decades to have 10% of their principal paid off, they achieve that milestone by year seven.

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