Are You Home-Ready Yet?
Ravish Kumar
| 15-12-2025

· News team
Buying a home in your 30s or 40s can feel like a moving target. Prices climb, interest rates bounce around, and it is easy to wonder whether your savings are “enough.”
Comparing your numbers to national data can provide context—but the real power comes from using that insight to build a clear plan.
Where You Stand
A useful starting point is looking at typical cash balances by age. The Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances tracks transaction accounts, which include checking, savings, money market accounts, brokerage cash, and prepaid cards. These are the kinds of accounts most people would tap for a down payment and closing costs.
For people under 35, the median balance in 2022 was about $5,400, while the average was roughly $20,540. Those between 35 and 44 had a median of around $7,500 and an average near $41,540. These figures highlight a big spread: some households have very little set aside, while others have significantly more.
Savings Benchmarks
Median numbers tell the story of the “middle” saver, while average values are pulled higher by people with much larger balances. If your savings are below the median, you are not alone—but you may need more time or a smaller home budget. If you are above the average, you are ahead of many peers.
Older groups generally hold more in cash. Households aged 45 to 54 had a median of around $8,700 and an average above $70,000. While this is encouraging, it also reminds buyers in their 30s and early 40s that expecting a large down payment early in life may be unrealistic without deliberate planning.
Down Payment Math
Now to the tricky part: housing costs. Recent data show that the median sales price for a home in the United States is in the low four hundred thousands. The typical down payment is around the mid-teens as a percentage of the purchase price, which works out to roughly sixty thousand dollars on a median-priced property.
That is just the starting point. The smallest down payment allowed on many first-time buyer programs—often about three percent—still lands above twelve thousand dollars at today’s prices. For most age groups under 65, that minimum alone is higher than their median transaction account balance, before even considering closing costs.
Closing Cost Reality
Closing costs commonly add another three to six percent of the purchase price. On a median-priced home, that means an additional bill in the low-to-mid tens of thousands. When both down payment and closing costs are combined, the cash needed can easily exceed seventy thousand dollars for a typical purchase.
This mismatch explains why so many buyers in their 30s and 40s feel squeezed. Their savings may be growing, but prices and fees climbed faster. Rather than seeing this as a reason to give up, treat it as confirmation that buying a home in this environment requires strategy, patience, and possibly some creative help.
High-Yield Accounts
If you are a few years away from buying, the first move is often to park your savings where it works harder for you while staying accessible. High-yield savings accounts, online banks, and competitive money market accounts can offer higher interest rates than traditional savings accounts, helping your home fund grow more quickly without locking it away.
Automating monthly transfers into this dedicated account turns saving from a vague intention into a habit. Treating the contribution like a non-negotiable bill—paid right after payday—reduces the temptation to spend that money elsewhere. When raises or bonuses arrive, directing a portion straight into this account can speed up progress.
Targeted Debt Paydown
Debt can quietly sabotage your homebuying plans in two ways: by consuming cash flow that could be saved and by making it harder to qualify for a mortgage. Prioritizing high-interest obligations, such as certain credit cards or personal loans, often gives the most benefit per dollar.
A structured plan—like the avalanche method, where you pay off the highest interest rate first—can reduce total interest over time. As balances fall, redirecting the freed-up payment amounts into your down payment fund strengthens your savings without increasing your overall monthly outlay.
Down Payment Help
Many buyers are surprised to learn how many programs exist to help bridge the gap. Local governments, housing agencies, employers, and nonprofit organizations may offer grants, forgivable loans, or low-interest second loans to cover some or all of a down payment or closing costs.
Eligibility often depends on income, location, or first-time buyer status. The application process can feel paperwork-heavy, but when successful, these programs can shave years off your savings timeline. Researching options in your area and attending first-time buyer workshops can uncover support you did not know existed.
Using Retirement Funds
Tapping retirement accounts for a home purchase can be tempting, and sometimes it is a reasonable part of a broader strategy. For qualifying first-time buyers, tax law allows up to a set amount—often ten thousand dollars—from an individual retirement account to be withdrawn for a home purchase without the usual early withdrawal penalty.
Some workplace plans also let you borrow from your own balance. A 401(k) loan, when available, is repaid through payroll deductions, with interest flowing back to your account rather than to a lender. Another option is withdrawing contributions (but not earnings) from a Roth individual retirement account.
Retirement Trade-Offs
Despite these possibilities, drawing from retirement savings carries trade-offs. Money taken out loses the opportunity to grow over decades, potentially shrinking future nest eggs. If a workplace loan is not repaid on time—for instance, after a job change—it may be treated as a taxable distribution.
This does not mean retirement savings are off-limits in every situation. Instead, they should be considered carefully and usually only after exhausting other options, such as increased saving rates, down payment assistance, or adjusting the target home price. A conversation with a financial professional can help weigh the long-term impact.
Refining Expectations
One of the most powerful levers buyers control is their own expectations. Choosing a less expensive neighborhood, a smaller property, or an older home in need of cosmetic updates can dramatically reduce the required down payment and closing costs. These choices may bring homeownership within reach years sooner.
In some cases, renting a bit longer while aggressively saving and paying down debt may be the better path. In others, taking advantage of assistance programs and being flexible about location or style may be enough to move forward now. The “right” answer depends on income stability, lifestyle, and future goals.
Conclusion
Comparing your savings to national averages can be eye-opening, but it is only the first step. What truly matters is how you use that information to shape a plan: boosting savings, trimming debt, exploring assistance, and making intentional trade-offs on price and timing. Given where you stand today, what is the next small move that will bring the keys to your future home closer to your hand?