How to Save for a Down Payment: A Realistic Plan
A practical guide to saving for a home down payment including how much you actually need, where to keep the money, and a month-by-month savings plan.
How Much Do You Actually Need?
The “20% down” rule is deeply embedded in homebuying advice, but most first-time buyers don’t put down 20%. The median down payment for first-time buyers is approximately 6-7%, and for repeat buyers, it’s about 17%.
Down Payment Options by Loan Type
| Loan Type | Minimum Down | On a $350,000 Home |
|---|---|---|
| VA | 0% | $0 |
| USDA | 0% | $0 |
| FHA | 3.5% | $12,250 |
| Conventional | 3-5% | $10,500-$17,500 |
| Conventional (no PMI) | 20% | $70,000 |
The Real Number: Down Payment + Closing Costs + Reserves
Your total cash needed is more than just the down payment:
| Component | Amount (on $350,000 home, 10% down) |
|---|---|
| Down payment | $35,000 |
| Closing costs (3%) | $9,450 |
| Moving expenses | $2,000-$5,000 |
| Immediate repairs/furnishing | $3,000-$10,000 |
| Emergency reserve (3 months) | $6,000-$12,000 |
| Total cash needed | $55,450-$71,450 |
Many buyers drain their savings for the down payment, leaving nothing for emergencies. This is dangerous. Budget for post-purchase reserves from the start.
The 20% Down Payment: Is It Worth It?
Pros of 20% Down
- No PMI: Private mortgage insurance costs $50-$300/month depending on loan amount and credit score. Eliminating it saves $600-$3,600/year.
- Lower monthly payment: Less principal financed = smaller mortgage payment.
- Better interest rate: Lenders offer slightly better rates with 20% down (typically 0.125-0.25% lower).
- Stronger offer: Sellers prefer buyers with larger down payments (less risk of financing falling through).
- Immediate equity cushion: 20% equity protects you if home values dip.
Pros of Less Than 20% Down
- Get into the market sooner: Home prices appreciate 3-5% annually in most markets. Waiting 3 years to save an additional $30,000 while prices rise $30,000-$50,000 means you’re running in place.
- Preserve liquidity: Keeping cash in savings or investments provides flexibility for emergencies, opportunities, or other financial goals.
- PMI is temporary: On a conventional loan, PMI drops off automatically at 22% equity. With appreciation, this can happen in 3-5 years.
- PMI is tax-deductible in some years (check current tax law).
- Opportunity cost: $50,000 extra toward a down payment versus invested in index funds could mean $130,000+ difference over 15 years at 8% returns.
The Math
On a $350,000 home at 6.5% interest:
| 5% Down | 10% Down | 20% Down | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Down payment | $17,500 | $35,000 | $70,000 |
| Loan amount | $332,500 | $315,000 | $280,000 |
| Monthly P&I | $2,102 | $1,991 | $1,770 |
| Monthly PMI | ~$165 | ~$115 | $0 |
| Total monthly | $2,267 | $2,106 | $1,770 |
| Cash remaining (from $75K saved) | $57,500 | $40,000 | $5,000 |
The 20% down payment saves $336-$497/month, but leaves you with almost no reserves. The 10% option provides a reasonable balance between monthly savings and financial safety.
Where to Keep Your Down Payment Savings
Your timeline determines the right account:
Less Than 2 Years Away: Maximum Safety
- High-yield savings account (HYSA): Currently 4-5% APY, FDIC insured, instantly accessible. Best for most savers.
- Money market account: Similar rates, sometimes with check-writing privileges.
- Short-term CDs: Slightly higher rates if you can lock money for 6-12 months. Choose no-penalty CDs for flexibility.
- Treasury bills: 4-5%+ yield, state tax exempt, government-backed. Slightly less liquid than a savings account.
2-5 Years Away: Conservative Growth
- HYSA remains the safest choice
- I Bonds: Inflation-protected, currently competitive rates. Must hold for at least 1 year; early withdrawal penalty (3 months interest) if redeemed before 5 years. Limit: $10,000/person/year.
- Short-term bond fund: Slightly more return than savings, but with some price volatility. Not ideal if you need the exact amount at a specific date.
More Than 5 Years Away: Consider Moderate Risk
- Conservative balanced fund (60% bonds, 40% stocks): Higher expected return but with meaningful risk of loss over shorter periods.
- Only if you can tolerate a 10-20% drop without panicking. If a market downturn would delay your home purchase, stick with HYSA.
Where NOT to Keep Down Payment Savings
- Individual stocks: A single stock can drop 50%+ in a year.
- Crypto: Extreme volatility. A 30% crash the month before closing would be catastrophic.
- Your checking account: 0% interest and too easy to spend.
- Long-term investments (if buying within 3 years): You can’t afford a market downturn right before you need the money.
Building Your Savings Plan
Step 1: Set Your Target
Choose your home price range, down payment percentage, and add closing costs and reserves.
Example target: $350,000 home, 10% down = $35,000 + $10,000 closing costs + $10,000 reserves = $55,000
Step 2: Set Your Timeline
How quickly can you realistically save this amount?
| Monthly Savings | Time to $55,000 |
|---|---|
| $500 | 9 years 2 months |
| $1,000 | 4 years 7 months |
| $1,500 | 3 years 1 month |
| $2,000 | 2 years 4 months |
| $2,500 | 1 year 10 months |
| $3,000 | 1 year 6 months |
Assumes 4.5% APY on savings
Step 3: Find the Money
Reduce expenses:
- Housing: Can you downsize temporarily, get a roommate, or negotiate rent?
- Transportation: Could you go from two cars to one? Use public transit?
- Subscriptions: Audit recurring charges (streaming, gym, apps, boxes)
- Dining: Cooking at home saves $200-$500/month for most households
- Insurance: Shop auto and renters insurance annually
Increase income:
- Negotiate a raise (the average successful negotiation increases salary 5-10%)
- Freelance or side gig (even $500/month adds $6,000/year)
- Sell unused items (declutter and fund your future home)
- Overtime or shift differentials
Redirect windfalls:
- Tax refunds (average ~$3,100)
- Work bonuses
- Cash gifts
- Inheritance
- Insurance settlements
Step 4: Automate Everything
Set up automatic transfers on payday. The money should move to your down payment savings account before you have a chance to spend it. Treat it like a bill, not a discretionary savings decision.
Step 5: Track Progress Monthly
Use a spreadsheet, budgeting app, or even a simple chart on your fridge. Seeing the balance grow provides motivation. Celebrate milestones (25%, 50%, 75% of goal).
Down Payment Assistance Programs
Don’t overlook free money:
State Housing Finance Agency Programs
Nearly every state offers down payment assistance for first-time buyers (and “first-time” often means anyone who hasn’t owned a home in 3 years). Programs include:
- Grants: Free money that doesn’t need to be repaid
- Forgivable loans: Repaid only if you sell or refinance within a set period (usually 5-10 years)
- Deferred loans: No payments required until you sell, refinance, or pay off the mortgage
- Below-market-rate loans: Second mortgages at low interest rates
Employer Programs
Large employers in competitive markets sometimes offer:
- Forgivable loans for down payments ($5,000-$15,000)
- Home purchase incentive payments
- Relocation assistance that can be applied to a purchase
Community and Nonprofit Programs
- Habitat for Humanity
- NACA (Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America): No down payment, no closing costs, below-market rates
- Community land trusts
- Local housing authorities
How to Find Programs
- DownPaymentResource.com: Searchable database by location
- Your state’s housing finance agency website (search “[your state] housing finance agency”)
- HUD-approved housing counselors: Free guidance on available programs (find at hud.gov)
Common Mistakes
- Waiting for 20%: Every year you wait, home prices likely increase 3-5%. Save enough to buy responsibly, not perfectly.
- Not accounting for closing costs: Many buyers are surprised by $8,000-$15,000 in closing costs. Build this into your savings target from the start.
- Investing down payment savings aggressively: A 20% market drop when you’re 6 months from buying is devastating. Keep it safe.
- Ignoring post-purchase reserves: Buying a home with $0 in savings is a financial emergency waiting to happen.
- Not exploring assistance programs: There may be $5,000-$20,000 available to you that you don’t know about.
- Lifestyle inflation while saving: Getting a raise and increasing spending proportionally. Direct raise increases toward the down payment fund.
The Bottom Line
Saving for a down payment is a marathon that requires clear goals, automated savings, and realistic timelines. You don’t need 20% down to buy a home. Focus on saving enough for a responsible purchase: sufficient down payment to secure favorable loan terms, closing costs, moving expenses, and a post-purchase emergency fund. Explore every assistance program available, keep your savings in a safe, accessible account, and stay consistent.
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