
Buy Now vs. Wait One Year vs. Wait Two Years — The Real Math
Before you read this, ask yourself one question:
What if mortgage rates drop next year — but home prices rise faster than the rate drop helps you?
That’s the part most buyers never actually run the math on.
Right now, millions of people are waiting for a “better” interest rate. Builders slowed down. Inventory stayed tight. Prices didn’t really fall. And first-time buyers are older than they’ve ever been.
When rates ease, those buyers don’t return slowly.
They come back all at once.
This isn’t about predicting the market.
It’s about understanding what happens when everyone waits for the same moment.
Builders Pulled Back — And That Matters More Than Rates
When interest rates rose, builders didn’t ramp up construction. They pulled back.
New construction slowed
Labor and material costs stayed high
Permits and development still take years, not months
Even if rates drop, new homes won’t show up fast enough to meet demand.
That’s why inventory remains tight — and why competition tends to return quickly when buyers re-enter the market.
Pent-Up Buyers Didn’t Disappear — They Aged
According to the National Association of Realtors, the median age of a first-time homebuyer is now 40 years old — the highest on record.
That tells us something important:
People still want to buy
They’ve been delayed, not discouraged
Many are financially stronger than past first-time buyers
When rates improve even slightly, this group doesn’t trickle back into the market.
They surge back.
Waiting Didn’t Stop Prices From Rising
A common belief is that waiting protects buyers from rising prices.
That hasn’t been true.
Across Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina:
Home prices stayed elevated
Inventory stayed limited
Demand stayed steady in desirable areas
A Palm Beach County Reality Check
Two years ago, many buyers waited because rates felt “too high.”
Today:
Home values are higher than they were then
Buyers who purchased gained equity
Buyers who waited missed appreciation and now face higher prices
That’s the quiet cost of waiting — it doesn’t feel painful at first, but it adds up.
Let’s Slow This Down and Look at the Math
Most buyers assume waiting for lower rates automatically means a lower payment.
That only works if prices stay flat — and history shows they usually don’t.
To keep this comparison simple and apples-to-apples, the example below assumes a 20% down payment (80% loan-to-value). Many buyers qualify for lower down payment options, which we’ll address below.
(Same type of home. Same loan term. Only price and rate change.)

What This Comparison Is Really Showing You
At first glance, lower rates feel like the win.
But when prices rise at the same time:
Loan amounts increase
Monthly payments don’t drop the way people expect
And years of potential equity are lost
Waiting one year results in a higher payment.
Waiting two years barely improves the payment — but still costs time and equity.
Rates are temporary.
Purchase price is permanent.
You can refinance a rate later.
You can’t refinance what you paid for the house — or the appreciation you missed while waiting.
This Example Isn’t One-Size-Fits-All — And That’s the Point
This comparison assumes 20% down for clarity, not because it’s required.
There are programs that allow:
3% down Conventional
3.5% down FHA
100% financing for VA-qualified buyers
Mortgage insurance and program-specific terms may apply, but the core lesson stays the same:
when prices rise, lower rates don’t always save you money.
The Wealth Gap Tells the Bigger Story
Here’s a stat that puts all of this into perspective:
Median net worth of homeowners: ~$430,000
Median net worth of renters: ~$10,000
That means homeowners are about 43 times wealthier than renters on average.
That gap didn’t come from perfect timing.
It came from owning an appreciating asset over time.
Why “Buy When You’re Ready” Often Beats “Wait for Perfect”
The real risk isn’t buying at today’s rate.
The real risk is:
Waiting while prices rise
Facing more competition later
Paying more for the same home
Or staying stuck renting while equity passes you by
There is no perfect time.
There is only prepared vs. unprepared.
Final Thought
Buying a home isn’t about beating the market.
It’s about positioning yourself wisely inside it.
If you’re financially ready today, waiting for perfection may quietly cost you opportunity.
If you want clarity on how this applies to your situation, the first step is a conversation — not pressure.
👉 https://interconnectmortgage.com/calendar
Disclaimer:
This content is for educational purposes only and not a commitment to lend.
Interconnect Mortgage — NMLS #1720882.
Licensed in Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina.
Check licensing at NMLS Consumer Access.
