October 27, 2025
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New Homeowners Face Record Mortgage Payments Despite Lower Home Values

Census Data Shows 2024 Movers Paying 41% More per Month

Higher mortgage bills and lower-priced homes are increasingly the norm for Americans who moved in 2024, according to new 1-year estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey.

Households that took on a mortgage last year reported a median monthly payment of $2,225, the highest since the ACS began tracking comparable data in 2008 and more than 20% above what recent movers paid in 2021 ($1,797). At the same time, the pool of owners taking on new mortgages shrank to 1.5 million, the smallest since 2014 and the third straight yearly drop from a 2021 peak of 2.1 million.

Payment growth did moderate. Median costs for 2024 movers rose 3.6% from 2023, roughly one-third of the prior year’s 10% jump. But owners who stayed put continue to be insulated: households that last moved before 2022 have seen little movement in their monthly payments across recent surveys. For example, owners who last moved in 2019 paid a median $1,578 in 2024—statistically unchanged from 2022 and 2023.

The divide between new and established owners widened to a record. Adjusted for inflation, those who moved in 2024 paid $648 more per month—41.1% higher—than households that last moved five years earlier. In 2019, the gap was $232, or 14.8%.

Home values climbed broadly after 2019, yet that hasn’t translated into lower carrying costs for new buyers. The median value for homes purchased by 2024 movers was $391,500—about 18% higher than the 2019 cohort’s—but many earlier movers still own costlier homes while paying much less each month. Owners who moved in 2021, for instance, reported homes valued 5.3% above those of 2024 movers while carrying median payments $495 lower. Likewise, 2019 movers held homes valued around $396,800—roughly $5,000 more than 2024 movers—despite considerably smaller monthly notes.

Census officials attribute the trend to familiar pressures: elevated mortgage rates, thinner down payments, and higher costs tied to insurance and property taxes. While Los Angeles and other high-cost markets remain outliers, the ACS figures capture a national pattern in which the timing of a purchase—and the financing environment attached to it—now drives monthly affordability more than the price tag alone.

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