In Q4 2025, the median US home sale price was $414,900. The median down payment was $78,831 — approximately 19% of the purchase price. But first-time buyers averaged just 10%, or about $41,490. The common belief that you need 20% down is a myth that prevents millions of would-be buyers from even starting to save. Understanding the actual requirements and strategies can accelerate your timeline dramatically.
How Much Do You Actually Need?
| Loan Type | Minimum Down Payment | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Conventional loan | 3% | PMI required under 20%; good credit needed |
| FHA loan | 3.5% | Credit score 580+; mortgage insurance for life of loan |
| FHA loan (lower credit) | 10% | For credit scores 500–579 |
| VA loan | 0% | Veterans and active military only; no PMI |
| USDA loan | 0% | Rural areas only; income limits apply |
| Jumbo loan | 10–20% | Loans above conforming limits (~$766,550) |
💡 Pro Tip: The 20% down payment standard eliminates Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI), which costs 0.5–1.5% of your loan annually. On a $400,000 loan, PMI is $2,000–$6,000 per year. Weigh the cost of waiting to save 20% vs. paying PMI and entering the market sooner.
Setting Your Savings Target and Timeline
Start with the target home price in your market, then work backward. If you are targeting a $350,000 home with a 10% down payment, your target is $35,000. Add closing costs — typically 2–5% of the purchase price, or $7,000–$17,500 — and you are looking at $42,000–$52,500 total cash needed at closing.
| Monthly Savings | Time to $35,000 | Time to $52,500 |
|---|---|---|
| $500/month | 70 months (5.8 years) | 105 months (8.75 years) |
| $750/month | 47 months (3.9 years) | 70 months (5.8 years) |
| $1,000/month | 35 months (2.9 years) | 53 months (4.4 years) |
| $1,500/month | 23 months (1.9 years) | 35 months (2.9 years) |
| $2,000/month | 18 months (1.5 years) | 26 months (2.2 years) |
Where to Keep Your Down Payment Savings
Where you save matters almost as much as how much you save. Your down payment fund should be liquid and low-risk, since you may need it at any time and cannot afford to have it decline in value right when you need it.
- High-Yield Savings Account (HYSA): 4.5–5.0% APY in 2025; FDIC insured; fully liquid
- Money Market Account: Similar yield to HYSA; check-writing access; FDIC insured
- Treasury bills (4–6 month T-bills): Slightly higher yield; low risk; state tax exempt
- CD ladder: Lock portions at higher rates with staggered maturity dates
- Avoid: stock market for money needed within 3 years due to volatility risk
Strategies to Accelerate Your Savings
- Open a dedicated down payment account (separate from emergency fund)
- Set up automatic transfers on payday — remove temptation entirely
- Apply any windfalls (tax refunds, bonuses, gifts) directly to the account
- Reduce discretionary spending temporarily: dining, subscriptions, entertainment
- Increase income: side gig, overtime, or part-time work specifically for the goal
- Downsize current housing temporarily if rent is the biggest barrier
Down Payment Assistance Programs
As of Q4 2024, there were 2,466 homebuyer assistance programs nationwide — the highest number ever recorded. These programs offer grants, forgivable loans, and matched savings that can provide $5,000–$50,000 or more in assistance. Many first-time buyers do not know these programs exist.
- State Housing Finance Agencies (HFAs): Every state has one; most offer assistance for first-time buyers
- HUD-approved programs: Search HUD.gov for local programs
- FHA Good Neighbor Next Door: 50% discount for teachers, police, firefighters
- Fannie Mae HomePath ReadyBuyer: 3% closing cost assistance on foreclosed properties
- Local city and county programs: Often the most generous; income-targeted
- Employer-assisted housing: Some large employers offer down payment grants
💡 Pro Tip: Many down payment assistance programs are forgivable loans — meaning if you stay in the home for 3–5 years, you never repay the assistance. This is essentially free money you must research and apply for.
Gift Funds: Using Family Support
For conventional and FHA loans, you can use gift funds from family members for your down payment, provided you can document that the money is a gift (not a loan requiring repayment). Your lender will require a gift letter stating this explicitly. In 2025, the annual gift tax exclusion is $18,000 per donor — meaning two parents can gift $36,000 without tax implications.
The True Cost of Waiting
Many would-be buyers wait to save a perfect 20% while paying rent. The opportunity cost can be substantial. If a $350,000 home appreciates at 4% annually and you wait 3 years to save 20% instead of buying with 10% down now, you have missed approximately $44,000 in appreciation while the target price also increased to $394,000 — requiring even more savings. Waiting is not always the financially optimal choice.
⚠️ Important: Do not drain your emergency fund for a down payment. Buying a home requires ongoing maintenance costs — typically 1–2% of home value per year. Enter homeownership with both a down payment and a separate home maintenance reserve.
Your Down Payment Savings Checklist
- Determine target home price and required down payment percentage
- Calculate total cash needed including closing costs and reserves
- Open dedicated HYSA for down payment savings
- Set up automatic monthly transfer on payday
- Research down payment assistance programs in your state and city
- Check credit score — aim for 720+ for best conventional mortgage rates
- Avoid large purchases or new credit applications in the 6–12 months before buying
- Get mortgage pre-approval when you are 3–6 months from your target