• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

Are Your Social Security Benefits Taxable This Year?

February 28, 2026

Trump’s Healthcare Proposal: Could Your Family Survive a $31,000 Deductible?

February 28, 2026

8 Ways I Used AI to Slash Our Expenses by $2,340

February 28, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • Are Your Social Security Benefits Taxable This Year?
  • Trump’s Healthcare Proposal: Could Your Family Survive a $31,000 Deductible?
  • 8 Ways I Used AI to Slash Our Expenses by $2,340
  • Black History Month Feels Different This Year — And So Should Your Leadership
  • How His Printing Franchise Grew to $115 Million in Revenue
  • Mom’s $12K-a-Month Side Hustle Inspired By Whole Foods Trip
  • 7 AI Tools to Build a One-Person Business (One Is So Powerful, Founders Keep It on a Separate Computer)
  • American Express to build 55-floor tower at World Trade Center site
Saturday, February 28
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Indenta
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
Indenta
Home » Lower Payments, Higher Lifetime Cost
Retirement

Lower Payments, Higher Lifetime Cost

News RoomBy News RoomNovember 13, 20255 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

The 50-year Mortgage Idea Being Floated

On November 8, 2025, President Trump on Truth Social posted a picture of himself with FDR proposing that he wants lenders (perhaps first Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) to offer 50-year mortgages, which would lower the required monthly payment on new loans. This is a classic (and legitimate) political strategy called “floating a balloon.”

The idea is that if you “float a policy idea” you can gauge public opinion: will be shot down in the public market-place of ideas or embraced?

This 50-year mortgage idea is likely to be shot down.

Why A 50-Year Mortgage Idea Balloon Will Pop

The idea of a 50-year mortgage was aired publicly before details were vetted inside the administration. That type of airing signals there is no finalized rule or implementation timeline, it is just a way to test public opinion about ways to make homes more affordable. Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) Director William (Bill) Pulte has separately signaled that the Trump Administration is trying to figure out how to make borrowing to buy a house easier and cheaper. These ideas have been discussed (and shot down before). Two ideas are to let mortgages by assumable — a qualified buyer take over a seller’s existing loan — which would create more risk) and have mortgages be portable — let a borrower move the mortgage to a new home — which also would create more risk.

50-Year Mortgages Are Arithmetic Not Wealth Building Or Risk Reduction

The appeal of longer amortization is mechanical: stretch payments over more periods and the monthly bill falls. But with a 50-year mortgage lifetime interest cost rises, and the path to equity becomes much slower.

Wealth

Consider a fixed 5% rate for a $500,000 loan. A 30-year mortgage monthly payment is $2,700 per month on which about $466,000 will be paid in total interest over the life of the loan. A 50-year mortgage drops the payment to about $2,300 but raises lifetime interest to about $862,000.

Crucially, the illustration above assumes identical interest rates across terms but that is not the real market. Longer mortgages charge higher rates. At the end of week of November 6, In early November, Freddie Mac reported the average 30-year fixed rate was about 6.22%, while 10-year fixed quotes were around 5.6%. At those rates on a $500,000 loan, the 30-year payment is roughly $3,069 per month versus $5,500 on a 10-year, but the lifetime interest is about $605,000 on the 30-year compared with about $155,000 on the 10-year—roughly $449,000 more interest in exchange for a 44% lower monthly bill.

A 50-year mortgage would push this tradeoff even further: smaller monthly payments but much more interest over a lifetime

On top of debt service, owners should budget for the cost of being locked into a neighborhood if housing prices tank or the risk of forced retirement or job loss increases.

Also, when deciding between renting and buying people often underestimate “carrying costs” how much upkeep costs. A $500,000 home may require roughly $10,000 – $20,000 per year for taxes, insurance, and maintenance. Expenses renters don’t directly shoulder. This is why independent financial planners (not brokers or lenders – they make money of a homeowner’s debt ) still urge substantial down payments and shorter fixed terms when feasible: faster amortization builds equity sooner and reduces exposure to housing-market shocks late in life. (Illustrative calculations.)

50 – Year Mortgages Could Reduce Not Increase Housing Affordability

From a market-wide perspective, monthly payment relief will certainly boost demand for home purchases. If homebuilding is as slow to respond to demand as it has been then prices will increase. What the market does is transfer newfound “affordability” into higher prices (that happened to college costs when student loan access expanded).

Risk

And a 50-year mortgage and other tricks to lower mortgage payments on (mostly) highly leveraged home lows would likely add risk.

First, the Consumer Financial Protection (CFB) Bureau is tasked with protecting consumers, including home buyers. They don’t want people being talked into mortgages and homes they can’t afford. The CFB created a way to help buyers know if they have an ability to repay a loan. The CFB’s framework is called “Ability-to-Repay/Qualified Mortgage (ATR/QM)guidelines, which helps guide Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and FHA50- year mortgages strain an ability to pay framework. And, now, there is a way to extend mortgages to 40 years.

And the reason one could extend under current rules should make anyone pause about embracing 50-year mortgages. In 2023, the Housing and Urban Development agency (HUD) finalized a rule allowing loans to go to 40 years in case a borrower was about to default on the loan. The length of the loan could be increased to help troubled borrowers – someone accepting what became a poor contract that stretched them too tight and made fragile their ability to pay.

A second proposed set of changes that may cause more risk concerns assumably and portability. If loans could be assumed interest-rate risk would shift from borrowers to loan investors and servicers, altering prepayment behavior and the duration profile of mortgage-backed securities. That, in turn, would affect investor appetite, pricing, and hedging. The hedging would come about because these actions put more risk on the lenders: the banks and financial institutions.

Bottom Line On 50% Year Mortgages

A 50-year mortgage is a re-timing device. It shifts cash flows to make today’s payment smaller but commits a household to more total interest and decades of leverage, with slower equity accumulation and greater vulnerability to local housing shocks late in life. It look like many of Trump’s usual supporters do not endorse the idea. Reuters reports that over the weekend on X, Republican U.S. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene wrote “In debt forever, in debt for life!” while right-wing activist Mike Cernovich reacted with “Lifetime mortgages.”

Whether a 50-year mortgage truly expands affordability depends on housing supply responsiveness to the increase in demand.

Sensible Mortgage Advice

For now, the most reliable rule of thumb of personal finance remains: shorter fixed terms and larger down payments build wealth faster—unless prospective home-price appreciation persistently and substantially exceeds the mortgage rate, an assumption no household can guarantee or diversify away. There are many risks to 50-year mortgages. There are many risks to borrowing over any extended time period.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

Are Your Social Security Benefits Taxable This Year?

Retirement February 28, 2026

Trump’s Federal Retirement Account Is A Serious Step Forward

Retirement February 26, 2026

How A 529 Plan Can Help A Child Save For Retirement

Retirement January 30, 2026

5 Resources For Long Life Learning

Retirement January 29, 2026

Pre-Tax IRA To 401(k) Transfers

Retirement January 28, 2026

IRS Gives IRA Providers More Time To Implement SECURE 2.0 Changes

Retirement January 27, 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

Trump’s Healthcare Proposal: Could Your Family Survive a $31,000 Deductible?

February 28, 20260 Views

8 Ways I Used AI to Slash Our Expenses by $2,340

February 28, 20260 Views

Black History Month Feels Different This Year — And So Should Your Leadership

February 28, 20260 Views

How His Printing Franchise Grew to $115 Million in Revenue

February 28, 20260 Views
Don't Miss

Mom’s $12K-a-Month Side Hustle Inspired By Whole Foods Trip

By News RoomFebruary 28, 2026

Key Takeaways Mercuriello wondered why there wasn’t a perfectly portioned pasta and sauce kit that…

7 AI Tools to Build a One-Person Business (One Is So Powerful, Founders Keep It on a Separate Computer)

February 28, 2026

American Express to build 55-floor tower at World Trade Center site

February 27, 2026

FHFA chief says Trump deployed $200B to slash mortgage rates, impact was immediate

February 27, 2026
About Us

Your number 1 source for the latest finance, making money, saving money and budgeting. follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

We're accepting new partnerships right now.

Email Us: [email protected]

Our Picks

Are Your Social Security Benefits Taxable This Year?

February 28, 2026

Trump’s Healthcare Proposal: Could Your Family Survive a $31,000 Deductible?

February 28, 2026

8 Ways I Used AI to Slash Our Expenses by $2,340

February 28, 2026
Most Popular

Could You Get a Big Tariff Rebate Check? Here’s the Latest.

February 22, 202629 Views

After Court Ruling, Trump Says US Global Tariff Rate Will Rise From 10% to 15%

February 23, 20263 Views

German Business Sentiment Ticked Up in November Despite Recession Fears

November 24, 20233 Views
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2026 Inodebta. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.