Home Prices Are Still Rising, Even as the Market Slows
The U.S. housing market remains difficult for buyers. In April 2026, the national median existing-home sales price reached $417,700, according to the National Association of Realtors. That was a 0.9% increase from a year earlier and marked the 34th straight month of year-over-year price growth.
At the same time, sales activity was nearly flat. Existing-home sales increased only 0.2% month over month in April, showing that many buyers are still being held back by affordability challenges, mortgage rates, and limited budget flexibility.
What a Down Payment Looks Like at $417,700
For buyers, the headline number matters because every percentage point of down payment now represents a large cash requirement.
On a $417,700 home:
| Down Payment | Cash Needed |
|---|---|
| 3.5% | $14,620 |
| 5% | $20,885 |
| 10% | $41,770 |
| 20% | $83,540 |
A 20% down payment may help buyers avoid private mortgage insurance, but for many households, saving more than $83,000 before closing costs is unrealistic. Even lower-down-payment options still require buyers to bring thousands of dollars upfront, before considering inspections, moving costs, insurance, taxes, and other expenses.
The Real Problem Is Monthly Affordability
The down payment is only the first hurdle. The bigger challenge is the monthly cost of ownership. Mortgage rates remain much higher than they were during the pandemic-era housing boom, which means buyers are paying more each month even if home-price growth has slowed.
NAR’s April report also shows regional differences. The median existing-home price was $510,800 in the Northeast, $324,500 in the Midwest, $366,600 in the South, and $619,600 in the West. That means affordability depends heavily on where a buyer lives, works, and is willing to move.
What Buyers Should Take Away
The April housing data does not show a crash. It shows a market where prices are still high, sales are sluggish, and affordability remains stretched. Buyers should avoid focusing only on the list price or the minimum down payment.
A more realistic plan should include the down payment, closing costs, mortgage rate, property taxes, insurance, maintenance, and emergency savings. In today’s market, the question is not simply whether you can buy a home. It is whether you can still afford the home after the deal closes.