Down Payment Downer
This is how much of your salary is required for a down payment in Dallas
As more and more people move to Texas and Dallas home values continue to soar, buyers are having a tough time playing the real estate game. The main impediment is having enough cash for a down payment, which nowadays can deplete even the most well-intentioned savings account.
Why? Because Dallas-Fort Worth residents looking to buy a home must save around two-thirds of their annual salary just for the down payment. That number comes from a new Zillow report, and puts DFW in line with the national average.
As the study points out, there are ways to swing a lower down payment — with an FHA mortgage, for example, which only requires 3.5 percent — but most buyers are looking to take advantage of the best rates and terms, as well as stand out from the heavy competition. That's why 20 percent is still the magic number.
In DFW, that chunk of change translates to around $40,080, based on the Zillow Home Value Index median price of $200,400 for the area. With the median salary for DFW workers hovering around $62,607, that's 64 percent of our yearly earnings we'd need to set aside. Compared to the 67 percent national average, that sounds ... almost not terrible?
Especially when compared to San Francisco and Los Angeles. Many Californians are faced with producing the impossible amount of 111 to 182 percent of their salaries, while New Yorkers get the slight reprieve of only needing 114 percent.
Zillow points out that nearly half of all homebuyers right now are first-timers, meaning "they can't rely on the equity in their current home and must come up with the cash to get into the housing market — often while paying record-high rents."
Elsewhere in Texas, Houstonians are scraping together 57 percent of their $62,099 median salaries, or putting $35,200 toward a $176,000 house. San Antonians score one percent lower, putting $31,240 toward a $156,200 home — and a severe dent in their $55,796 salaries.
But it's still not as bad as Austin, where buyers are expected to spend a whopping 82 percent of their salary on a down payment. That's $51,960 out of a median income of $63,389, going toward a $259,800 house.
While none of the 34 cities Zillow examined has an especially low number, there are three cities where you can assemble 20 percent for less than half your yearly salary. Indianapolis; Kansas City, Missouri; and Pittsburgh all offer the tantalizing promise of only 48 percent, with Pittsburgh's median down payment being the lowest at $26,680.