Personal Finance Essentials
Determining the Correct Down Payments
- Back to Home Ownership
- Are You Ready to Buy?
- How Much to Pay for Your Home
- Determining the Correct Down Payments
- 10 Reasons Why You Should Get As Big a Mortgage as Possible
- Selecting the Right Mortgage
- The Mortgage is Just the Beginning of What You’ll Spend Monthly
- Tax Considerations for Homeowners
- The Home Buying and Selling Process
- Real Estate as an Investment Asset
- Home Ownership and Estate Planning
- Home Ownership and Retirement Planning
- Home Ownership and Your Financial Plan
How Much Should You Put Down?
Rethinking the Down Payment Dilemma
Conventional wisdom says to put as much money down as possible when buying a home. The financial logic says otherwise. A larger down payment reduces your loan but also reduces your cash — money that could otherwise be earning returns in investments.
Saving for a Down Payment
When saving toward a specific purchase like a down payment, investment risk should match your timeline. Consider Holly, age 28, who wants to buy a $500,000 home in two years. She has $45,000 saved and puts aside $750 per month. She needs about $62,500 for the down payment and closing costs. At $750 per month, for two years, she will accumulate another $18,200, bringing her total to $63,000 — even without earning any interest at all. She has no reason to take investment risk. The principle is simple: only take as much risk as you need to achieve your goal.
Smaller Down Payments Preserve Wealth
When you buy, there is a strong case for keeping your down payment as small as possible and investing the rest. Consider Julia and Jean, who both have $350,000 cash and want to buy a $350,000 home. Julia pays cash — no mortgage, no payment. Jean puts down $70,000 (20%), gets a $280,000 mortgage at 7%, and invests the remaining $280,000 at 10% annual returns. After the mortgage interest tax deduction, her real cost is about $1,442 per month — and her investments are generating over $1,750 per month in after-tax returns.
After thirty years, Julia’s house is worth $1,050,000. Jean’s house is also worth $1,050,000 — plus the original $280,000 she invested has grown substantially, and she has reinvested the monthly surplus throughout. Jean’s net worth is more than twice Julia’s. Carrying a mortgage and investing the difference is, over the long run, a far more effective strategy for building wealth.
