Is It a Good Time to Buy a House? You Are Asking the Wrong Question.

Author: Protik Ganguly

Published May 31, 2026·2 min read

Every housing market cycle produces the same question: is now a good time to buy a house in 2026? The question is understandable. It is also mostly the wrong frame — because it assumes the primary variable is the market, when the primary variable is almost always the buyer.

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Here is what the 2026 housing market actually looks like. Mortgage rates sit around 6.44% — down from 7% in early 2025 but above the 6% threshold most affordability models treat as the floor for first-time buyer feasibility (Kiplinger, 2026). There are currently 480,000 more home sellers than buyers — making this technically a buyer's market with real negotiating leverage (Redfin, 2026). Active listings have increased 7.9% — the twenty-eighth consecutive month of inventory growth. Home prices are forecast to rise 2 to 4% nationally. The market is more balanced than it has been in years. It is not cheap.

The first-time buyer picture is stark. The median age of first-time buyers has risen to 40 — up from 29 in the 1980s — and their market share has fallen to just 21% (Amerisave, 2026). Affordability, not desire, is the constraint. Meanwhile the lock-in effect keeps existing inventory suppressed: approximately 60% of US mortgage holders sit on rates below 4% from 2020-2021. Selling means giving up that rate and taking on a new mortgage at 6.44% — on a more expensive home. Many are choosing to stay put.

Geography matters more than it used to. While coastal markets remain expensive and sluggish, Midwest cities — Columbus, Indianapolis, Kansas City — are showing outsized growth driven by affordability and university proximity (NAR, 2026). The national average conceals wide regional variation. Where you buy matters as much as when.

The "date the rate, marry the house" strategy has real merit and real risk. The merit: prices are rising and waiting costs you the appreciation you miss. The risk: Fannie Mae does not expect rates to fall below 6% this year, and the new Fed chair faces potential rate hikes not cuts.

When is it a good time to buy? When you are financially ready — not when the market is. A household that can put 20% down, carry the monthly payment at no more than 28 to 30% of gross income, maintain a six-month emergency fund after closing, and plans to stay for at least five years is in a position to buy regardless of market timing. Time in the market consistently beats timing the market. The best time to buy was always when you were ready.


References

Amerisave. (2026). Best time to buy a house in 2026: Seasonal strategies and market insights. https://www.amerisave.com/learn/best-time-to-buy-a-house-in-seasonal-strategies-market-insights

Kiplinger. (2026, April 16). Mortgage rates and signals that tell you it's time to buy. https://www.kiplinger.com/taxes/mortgage-rates-and-signals-that-tell-you-its-time-to-buy

Mortgage Info. (2026, May). 2026 housing market predictions: Buy now or wait? https://mortgage-info.com/blog/housing-market-predictions-2026-buy-now-or-wait

NAR. (2026, January). 2026 real estate outlook. https://www.nar.realtor/magazine/real-estate-news/2026-real-estate-outlook-what-leading-housing-economists-are-watching

Redfin. (2026, May). Is now a good time to buy a house? https://www.redfin.com/blog/is-now-a-good-time-to-buy-a-house/

Yahoo Finance. (2026, May). Is now a good time to buy a house? https://finance.yahoo.com/personal-finance/mortgages/article/is-now-a-good-time-to-buy-a-house-224612050.html

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