Trump proposes 50-year mortgages — what to consider

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President Donald Trump over the weekend slipped a missive into a Truth Social post that may well change the way many consumers buy a home—but experts are not sold on the idea. 

On Nov. 8, the President announced the proposal in a post titled “Great American Presidents,” which included the words “50-year mortgage” above a photo of himself and “30-year mortgage” over a photo of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. In response, the head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, Bill Pulte, said the agency would consider the matter, calling the President’s tacit proposal a “complete game changer” for affordability.  

A 50-year mortgage product would ostensibly allow those with a smaller monthly housing budget to enter the housing market, because the minimum mortgage payment would be lower than that of a traditional 30-year fixed-rate mortgage. But critics say such a product could actually make the housing market less affordable and cost homeowners in interest and home equity. 

Here’s why: Homeownership has become unaffordable for many Americans as the housing supply has tightened. Over the past 15 years, an increasing number of Americans have entered the housing market, and new home creation hasn’t kept pace with demand. Earlier this year, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce estimated the nation is short a whopping 4.7 million homes. The proposal may worsen conditions, experts say. 

“More flexible financing is essentially a subsidy for housing demand, which will add to the pool and buying power of homebuyers without increasing the supply of homes, which will drive home prices up,” Realtor.com Senior Economist Joel Berner said in a statement to CNBC Select. “The ‘savings’ from 50-year mortgages may be totally negated by rising home prices.” 

On top of that, a borrower with this loan would likely have a higher interest rate and, as a result, pay significantly more over the life of the loan. Berner said he estimates that a hypothetical 50-year fixed-rate borrower would pay 86% more in interest than a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage borrower, and have over 10% less in home equity after a decade of homeownership. 

“This is not the best way to solve housing affordability. The administration would do better to reverse tariff-induced inflation, which is keeping the rates on existing mortgages high, and to encourage the expansion of housing supply by promoting homebuilding,” he said. “Buyers do benefit from spreading out the high cost of a home purchase over a longer period, but lenders certainly benefit too by having a longer period to charge higher interest rates.” 

If you’re looking for a way to save on monthly payments, here are three things you can do right now. 

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Editorial Note: Opinions, analyses, reviews or recommendations expressed in this article are those of the Select editorial staff’s alone, and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any third party.




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