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Bigger Down Payments Continue in Q4 2024 as Homeowners Use Pandemic Era Savings and Increased Home Equity

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2024 Saw the Highest Down Payments in the Data's History, Both as a Dollar Amount and as a Share of Purchase Price, according to Realtor.com®

AUSTIN, Texas, March 27, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- The typical down payment in the fourth quarter was $30,250, according to a new report from Realtor.com®, ever-so-slightly below the third quarter's level but roughly $3,000 higher than one year prior. Last year saw the highest down payments in the data's history, both as a dollar amount and as a share of purchase price. Down payments were 3.4 percentage points higher than pre-pandemic (2019 Q4) in the fourth quarter of 2024, emphasizing the trend towards bigger down payments.

"As inventory recovers, the housing market is very slowly tilting toward more balance between buyers and sellers. But down payments are still high—hitting an annual record in 2024," said Danielle Hale, Chief Economist, Realtor.com®.  "Today's home sales are skewed toward higher-end homes, and this means larger down payments from more financially prepared, high-earning buyers as entry-level and lower-earning buyers sit out. Additionally, higher mortgage rates give homebuyers good reason to limit their loan size and interest costs, by putting more down upfront. As long as the market remains tilted toward buyers who are less sensitive to home prices and mortgage rates, down payments are likely to remain relatively high."

Buyers paid 14.4% as a share of purchase price and $29,900 on average in 2024, up from 14.2% and $27,200 in 2023, and as the housing market is not expected to shift dramatically in coming months, recent down payment trends are likely to persist.

Homebuyers Utilize Pandemic-Era Savings and Home Equity
Homebuyers have been utilizing pandemic era savings to fuel consumer spending and larger down payments. In the three years before the pandemic, consumers saved 6.5% of their disposable income; however, during the pandemic that number spiked to over 30% and was above the pre-pandemic norm for more than 20 months.

Despite a lower savings rate since the pandemic highs, which would normally suggest buyers would have a harder time saving for a large down payment, the typical down payment dollar amount is still more than double the pre-pandemic median, and the typical down payment as a share of purchase price was more than 3 percentage points higher.

Still-large accumulations of pandemic savings likely help some homebuyers, especially buyers who also have the benefit of near-record high existing home equity that can boost a down payment, as well.