A 50-Year Mortgage Won't Make Homes Affordable
Ultra-long mortgages create the illusion of affordability but lock borrowers into decades of extra interest because leaders won’t fix the supply crunch.
Last week, Director of the Federal Housing Finance Administration Bill Pulte revealed a plan to offer 50-year mortgages to the public. The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, created in the 1930s, helped generations to slowly build home equity, providing them with a store of wealth even if they never invested elsewhere. Over time, lenders rolled out alternative mortgage structures—15-year fixed-rate loans, adjustable-rate mortgages, interest-only mortgages—but none rivaled the 30-year mortgage. Now, policymakers are proposing we stretch mortgages to 50 years, mainly to make today's sky-high home prices look more affordable.
House prices shot up in the great inflation of 2021, and remain at very high, unaffordable levels. A 50-year mortgage makes a house appear marginally more affordable by slightly reducing the monthly payment. However, it vastly increases the interest paid over the life of the mortgage.
For a $400,000 mortgage at a 6.5 percent interest rate, the monthly payment on a 50-year mortgage is $2,254.87 compared to $2,528.27 for a 30-year mortgage. And yet, this modest decrease in monthly payments will be offset by a dramatic increase in interest payments: from $510,177.95 on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage to a staggering $952,920.53 on a 50-year mortgage.
Most people balk at paying two or three times the home's price in interest. Some commenters online liken 50-year mortgages to "debt slavery." That isn't far off: Early payments on a 50-year loan are almost all interest, so equity builds painfully slowly, and it's not until you've owned the house for a few decades that you have a decent amount of equity.
This isn't automatically a bad thing. Because early 50-year payments are mostly interest, they function a lot like interest-only loans, which appeal to borrowers who expect irregular income and can pay down principal later. An interest-only mortgage does require some discipline, because if you don't diligently pay down the principal, you will owe a balloon payment at the end. But it is a good way to bring down monthly payments if you do have the discipline. However, borrowers without extra cash flow will simply make the minimum payment and end up paying the full $950,000 in interest.
There are additional benefits. Given the choice between a $2,254.87 mortgage payment and a $2,254.87 rent payment, the mortgage wins: It stays fixed for decades while rent rises. Also, as the owner of the property, the mortgage holder is entitled to any appreciation in the property's value. Over the course of 50 years, inflation alone makes it likely the home will appreciate, even if you build little equity from payments. Of course, house prices may go down, leaving the borrower with losses and debt. But unlike the adjustable-rate loans of the mid-2000s, fixed mortgage monthly payments won't rise, giving long-term stability even if prices dip.
The typical consumer of a 50-year mortgage is not expected to understand these nuances. Most buyers drawn to 50-year loans are just trying to reduce their monthly payments and will absorb the massive interest costs. Longer loans usually carry higher rates, which would erase even the small monthly savings provided by a 50-year mortgage, with an interest rate likely higher than that of a 30-year mortgage.
Other countries have tried ultra-long mortgages—Japanese banks issued 100-year mortgages during the real estate bubble of the late 1980s and early 1990s, and Swiss banks are still issuing 100-year mortgages to this day. (Swiss housing is very expensive.) The idea isn't new. The move here appears to be an attempt to boost demand in a sluggish housing market, but it dodges the real issue: Prices are high because we don't build enough homes.
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Jared Dillian of Jared Dillian Money is free to fund the construction of new housing units.
Deporting the many millions (and millions) of illegal alien rapefugees should free up some housing.
If someone elects to sign up for a 50 years mortgage, it’s none of your business.
^ This (as long ad the govt isn’t underwriting or insuring the loan)
This should have been the article. And to end Fannie and Freddie.
Without Freddie or Fannie lenders will not lend at reasonable interest rates...
Consider the interest charged on a mortgage then a car then an unsecured credit card...
Not sure. Once had a portfolio loan for a property that was maybe a quarter point higher. But I was low risk with other assets and a good track record with that financial institution (and they could take the property if I broke the contract where its value hadn’t escalated recently putting it at risk of dropping when a bubble burst).
Same. I have enough equity to secure a mortgage as well. Always get rates lower than F&F. Also ensure 20% down.
Lowering the amount of potential buyers by not subsidizing bad buyers will also lower costs.
Oh noes. If you loan with 20%, down there is equity to loan against.
Car loans are around 4% if you have good credit with minimal down.
Make loan risk transparent again.
Government subsidizing rates is not a good thing. No matter the market.
THANK YOU
I have variable income. I would like a 50yr mortgage. I would like the lower payment in bad months, and double up in good months. None of Reason’s business.
Next they’ll come out against payday loans and for childhood genital mutilation
"It stays fixed for decades while rent rises."
Every single thing that makes rents rise also makes owning a home more expensive.
Only the principal and interest remain the same; insurance, taxes, utilities, repairs and maintenance, furnishings, etc. all rise for a homeowner.
I can't think of a less liquid asset than a home.
The only people who make out are the real estate agents; they get paid on both ends of the ownership.
There is absolutely nothing wrong with a bank offering a 50 year mortgage. If they want to risk their money for 50 years, that is their decision. Likewise if a person wants to pay more interest with lower payments, this is their decision.
I however don't want the government to underwrite 30 year loans let alone 50 year mortgages. This is risking taxpayers money.
I can't fathom how even Reason could miss this point. So we should trust people with guns and psychedelics but not mortgage lengths? Wow.
As you say, keep the taxpayers out of it and let private lenders and borrowers decide what is best for them.
It is not "leaders" responsibility to build homes, they do not build anything.
The answer is known and simple.
Remove regulations. Building energy codes have forced the costs to build up by 30% since 2018.
Inflation of materials increased prices by 20% due to the abhorrent spending spree of congress under Biden.
Don’t forget those pesky tariffs increasing the cost of materials.
God youre a retarded moron.
The national average change in construction costs was 0.98% in the first quarter of 2025, down slightly from 1.11% in the previous quarter, and the year-over-year rate has decreased to 4.35% from 5.86% the prior year.
This is less than the average costs under Biden from new regulations. Less than inflation.
Do you have any interest in not being wrong? On top of that rents are decreasing, house supply is increasing from deportations and not funding illegal housing dumdum.
Leave it to you to compare a normal 4% increase to a 30% regulatory increase though. Notice it is less growth than last year lol.
Sarc must be referring to the custom Italian marble bathtub he got for his cardboard box.
If it was a good idea banks would have been offering it already.
In which sarc doesn't understand regulatory and subsidzation of an industry he pontificates on.
Under the Dodd-Frank Act, a mortgage loan term cannot exceed 30 years to be classified as a "Qualified Mortgage" (QM), which offers certain protections to lenders and investors. Without this status, lenders are hesitant to offer such products widely.
Poor sarc.
That is a disengenuously simplistic diagnosis.
Supply and demand are not the only factors by far. Regulations -- other people dictating their preferences to builders and buyers -- covering lot sizes, set backs, room sizes, types of fixtures and material specifications, limitations on and even outright prohibitions of manufactured homes, and a plethora of other minutia all add up to increase the cost of building and, therefore, the prices.
Central planners rarely take into account the extended costs of increasing population density. Increased traffic on the streets. Increased water supply. Increased electrical supply. Increased sanitation and waste disposal. Increased medical and emergency response. Air quality. Reducing red tape will not even remotely address that problem. Also, WHY do poor people want to live in high-cost high population density urban centers? So they will be near the rich people who hire them as maids and repairmen and sanitation engineers and security guards and ...
Jared's simplistic view is probably also for a market where folks are forced to build houses at a loss, or the government just builds them. he just wants to look at one part of the market.
Prices are NOT high because we don't build enough houses. Prices are high in some high population density areas (big blue cities) because there is no space to build more houses (unless you demolish the ten story apartment buildings and replace them with fifty story apartment buildings) and because the cost to build and maintain the infrastructure necessary to support that many people in that small a footprint increases geometrically as population density increases linearly. Nothing except technology improvements can remedy that and those are unpredictable and take time to develop and impement. No doubt bureaucratic red tape aggravates the problem, but YIMBY fixes are an illusion and the ex spurts at Reason ought to know better.
Hey buddy. Do you think immigration has an effect? Yes or no?
Hint. 400k homes built on average a year. 1.4M immigrants granted residency a year. 10M allowed and funded by government by Biden. Think this has an effect?
Subsidized loans increase the supply of money in the basket of money available to buy homes. This is inflationary. The very existence of subsidized loans increases the cost of homes. Eliminate the subsidies and the prices will fall.
Same problem with the cost of school. Same problem with the cost of health care. Same problem with grocery prices. The government providing the means to spend more makes the thing cost more. It is not just a supply problem. It is a monetary and policy problem.
If the fed restarts QE it will be even worse. The way they inject new cash into the market directly drives up the cost of housing. Kill the fed and housing prices will fall.
Again. The odds that anyone will make payments on a mortgage for half a century are pretty close to zero. Most mortgages don't last ten years let alone 50. I don't see any significant effect from this but some small percentage of buyers might see a benefit and I don't see any logical reason to prevent it.
As long as the feds don't "guarantee" the loan - - - - - -
Nothing will make housing more affordable. That ship has sailed, sank, raised, sailed, and sank again.
Why? Because we view houses as an investment. Investments are only worth it if they raise in value faster than inflation. After decades of housing raising faster than inflation we are where we are now. Almost all other investments one can buy into with almost any small amount of money because the assets are continuous dividable. You can buy a gram of gold, or with ETFs, fractions of shares of stocks. This is not true about houses. It is all or nothing with them. Unless we change our entire perspective on houses, nothing will change.
The next housing crash will, and it's already starting. It was only delayed because a lot of people were locked into low interest mortgages from 10 years ago and couldn't afford to sell, so less inventory is hitting the market.
In 2006 home prices were booming. They crashed everywhere and fell about 50%, and prices stayed low through 2012.
One more point. Reason continually preaches that the cost of housing is too high and building more housing will bring prices down. First of all investors will not build more housing unless they can get market price. It's a business not a charity. They are not going to invest in the proposition only to sell at a loss. The residential property market completely distorted by decades of government involvement but it is the world in which we live. If the goal is to crash the price of houses a whole lot of people that played by the rules will find themselves underwater or see their hard earned equity diminished. That is equity that they may depend on to remain solvent in retirement or secure a business loan or finance their kids education. This is a serious matter that the cheap housing libertarians won't even contemplate.
50 year mortgages will make homes more expensive, not less. Most people buy a house based on how much monthly payment they can afford. With a longer mortgage, they will bid up the selling price when they buy.