The average American homeowner age 55 to 64 carries a mortgage balance of $143,000 according to the Federal Reserve’s 2022 Survey of Consumer Finances. At today’s rates near 6.8 percent for a 15-year loan, that payment eats $1,270 a month before taxes and insurance.
For many of us staring at retirement in ten years or less, that number feels heavier than the house itself. The good news is a few straightforward calculations can tell you exactly how much house you can carry without robbing your future self of groceries, prescriptions and the occasional trip to see the grandkids.
The 28/36 Rule Still Matters
Lenders still use the 28/36 guideline: housing costs should stay under 28 percent of gross monthly income and total debt under 36 percent. For a couple with $6,000 combined monthly income, that caps housing at $1,680.
Add property taxes averaging 1.1 percent of home value per year and homeowners insurance at $2,000 annually, and the math tightens fast. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau reported in 2024 that 21 percent of borrowers over 50 now exceed the 36 percent total-debt threshold, mostly because of lingering student loans for adult children and rising health premiums.
Maintenance Costs Climb With Age
The National Association of Home Builders estimates annual maintenance at 1 to 4 percent of a home’s value. On a $400,000 house that equals $4,000 to $16,000 every year. After 50, many of us face new expenses: $3,200 average for a new roof every 20 years, $7,500 for HVAC replacement, and $12,000 for a ramp or walk-in shower if mobility changes.
A 2023 AARP study found 37 percent of homeowners 55 and older delayed necessary repairs because of cost, which only raises the eventual bill.
Downsizing Math That Actually Works
Selling a 2,800-square-foot family home and buying a 1,600-square-foot condo often cuts property taxes by 40 percent and utility bills by 35 percent according to data from the National Association of Realtors 2024 report. If your current house sells for $525,000 with $175,000 left on the mortgage, you could walk with roughly $320,000 after 6 percent realtor fees and closing costs.
Put half into a smaller paid-off home and invest the rest at a conservative 5 percent return and you generate $8,000 a year in extra income while slashing monthly housing costs from $2,100 to $650 including lower taxes.
Refinancing Versus Paying Off Early
Freddie Mac 기준으로 현재 15년 고정 금리는 2025년 6월 현재 6.1%입니다. <00,000 잔액을 15년 동안 이 금리로 재융자하면 월 >,698의 비용이 들지만 30년 대출을 7.2%로 유지하는 것에 비해 총 이자는 $92,000를 절약할 수 있습니다. |||9월||| 한 달에 500달러가 추가되는 경우 6.8%의 30년 모기지 원금을 원금에 적용하면 대출 기간이 9년 단축되고 2025년에 업데이트된 Bankrate의 상각 계산기에 따르면 이자가 124,000달러 절약됩니다. |||9월||| 역모기지 현실 |||9월||| 주택 자산 전환 모기지(Home Equity Conversion Mortgage) 프로그램을 통해 62세 이상의 주택 소유자는 월별 지불 없이 자산을 담보로 대출을 받을 수 있습니다. HUD 데이터에 따르면 2024년 평균 대출자는 <12,000를 받았습니다. |||9월||| 이자는 복리이므로 7.5%의 이자로 $300,000 주택을 구입하면 5년 안에 $45,000의 자산을 소비할 수 있습니다. 상속인은 주택을 상환하거나 판매해야 합니다. 소비자금융보호국(Consumer Financial Protection Bureau)은 2023년 역모기지 대출자의 12%가 재산세나 보험을 불이행하여 주택을 잃었다고 경고했습니다. |||9월||| 세금 및 메디케어 영향 |||9월||| 15개 주에서는 65세 이상 노인을 위한 재산세 경감 프로그램을 통해 연간 청구서를 500~1,200달러 삭감했습니다. 이러한 주 중 하나로 이사하거나 단순히 65세가 될 때까지 기다리는 것이 중요할 수 있습니다. |||9월||| 55세 이후 기본 주택을 판매하면 IRS 섹션 121에 따라 독신인 경우 최대 <50,000, 기혼인 경우 $500,000까지 이득을 제외할 수 있습니다. 메디케어 보험료는 소득에 따라 증가합니다. 2025년에 수정 조정 총소득이 <06,000를 초과하는 부부는 파트 B 및 D 추가 요금으로 연간 $5,400를 추가로 지불합니다. |||9월||| 지금 사용할 수 있는 간단한 워크시트 |||9월||| 귀하의 현재 월 총소득을 기재하십시오. 주택 천장에 0.28을 곱합니다. 예상 재산세(주택 가치 x 지역 세율을 12로 나눈 값), 보험(평균 >,800) 및 HOA 수수료(있는 경우)를 뺍니다. |||9월||| 나머지는 현실적인 모기지 지불금입니다. 해당 숫자를 현재 이자율로 온라인 계산기에 연결하면 최대 대출 규모를 확인할 수 있습니다. 계약금 20%를 빼면 목표 구매 가격이 됩니다. |||9월||| 가격의 2%로 예상되는 유지 관리를 조정하고 퇴직 예산과 비교하세요. 대부분의 기획자들은 Fidelity의 2024년 추정에 따르면 65세 이상 부부당 평균 315,000달러에 달하는 건강 관리 여유 공간을 확보하기 위해 주택 비용을 퇴직 소득의 20% 미만으로 유지할 것을 제안합니다. |||9월||| 55~64세의 평균 모기지 잔액
If you have an extra $500 a month, applying it to principal on a 6.8 percent 30-year mortgage shortens the loan by nine years and saves $124,000 in interest according to Bankrate’s amortization calculator updated for 2025.
Reverse Mortgage Realities
The Home Equity Conversion Mortgage program lets homeowners 62 and older borrow against equity without monthly payments. The average borrower in 2024 took $212,000 according to HUD data.
Interest compounds, so a $300,000 home at 7.5 percent interest can eat $45,000 of equity in five years. Heirs must repay or sell the home. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau warns that 12 percent of reverse-mortgage borrowers in 2023 defaulted on property taxes or insurance, losing the house.
Taxes and Medicare Impact
In 15 states, property-tax relief programs for those 65 and older cut bills by $500 to $1,200 annually. Moving to one of those states or simply waiting until 65 can matter.
Selling a primary home after age 55 lets you exclude up to $250,000 of gain if single or $500,000 if married under IRS Section 121. Medicare premiums rise with income; a couple with modified adjusted gross income over $206,000 in 2025 pays an extra $5,400 a year in Part B and D surcharges.
Simple Worksheet You Can Use Today
List your current gross monthly income. Multiply by 0.28 for the housing ceiling. Subtract expected property taxes (home value times local rate divided by 12), insurance ($1,800 average), and HOA fees if any.
The remainder is your realistic mortgage payment. Plug that number into an online calculator at current rates to see maximum loan size. Subtract 20 percent down payment and you have your target purchase price.
Adjust for expected maintenance at 2 percent of price and compare to your retirement budget. Most planners suggest housing costs stay below 20 percent of retirement income to leave room for health care that averages $315,000 per couple from 65 onward per Fidelity’s 2024 estimate.
Downsizing Savings Example
| Item | Current House | Smaller House |
|---|---|---|
| Sale/Purchase Price | $525,000 | $275,000 |
| Mortgage Balance | $175,000 | $0 |
| Monthly Payment | $2,100 | $650 |
| Annual Taxes | $5,775 | $3,025 |
| Yearly Maintenance | $8,000 | $4,000 |
| Cash Freed Yearly | $0 | $8,200 |
The smartest move after 50 is rarely about square footage or granite counters. It is about protecting cash flow so you can enjoy the years you have left without worrying about a roof that needs replacing or taxes that keep rising.
Take thirty minutes with last year’s tax return, this month’s bank statement, and a mortgage calculator. Write down the number you can truly afford. Then decide if your current house still fits or if a smaller, simpler place gives you both peace and extra money for the good life.
Most people who run these numbers are surprised how much breathing room appears when they stop guessing and start measuring.
Sources
- Federal Reserve, Survey of Consumer Finances (2022)
- Freddie Mac, Primary Mortgage Market Survey (June 2025)
- AARP, Home Repair and Maintenance Report (2023)
- National Association of Realtors, Existing-Home Sales Report (2024)
- Fidelity Investments, Retirement Health Care Cost Estimate (2024)
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Reverse Mortgage Data (2024)
- Internal Revenue Service, Publication 523 (2025)