this post was submitted on 06 Jun 2026
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me_irl
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My math says that the monthly principal+interest on that house is more like $4,300 a month, assuming:
Not insignificant, but not wildly off like the infographic.
You gotta roll home owners insurance in there, and taxes.
That's realistic, but the infographic doesn't include tax and insurance. Working backwards, it has:
The monthly principal-and-interest payment is exactly as the post said, $2024 / month.
Has insurance gone up? Absolutely? Have property taxes generally rise? They have. But this is an honest like-for-like comparison.
Who has 120k lying around for a down payment?
That's "only" (checks average income in the U.S.) 2 years of average income in the U.S.
Oh, and that's $120K after tax
Someone selling a home they already own. I know thats not helpful to most, but thats the only realistic way to have 120k sitting around
$2024 > $4300 is more than double, while also assuming saving an extra $50,000 in downpayment while that cost increased.
Although the down payment has less impact. But nonetheless, that lower payment boosts the loan to about $4600.
Wages aren't doubling.
Oh, I agree with you, and concur with the spirit of the infographic. I just like accurate calculations!
We don't do 30 years here anymore. Its 25, and most people can't do the 20% down, its 5% for first time homebuyer
Fun fact: the increase in monthly payment going from a 30-year down to a 20-year mortgage is less than 20-year to 15-year.
This is also why the talk about longer mortgages should be a non-starter.