Mortgage rates gave buyers a short-lived break in February 2026, falling below 6%. That hope vanished as rates climbed back toward 6.5%. According to Morgan Stanley, the era of easily accessible homeownership that lasted until 2022 is permanently over.
Why the Shift Is Permanent
Five structural forces are locking in higher housing costs, according to Morgan Stanley research. Long-term interest rates are staying elevated. Millennials and older Gen Z buyers are entering their peak home-buying years, pushing up demand.
Local land-use rules restrict new construction. Permitting is slow. And rising insurance costs from climate risk add another layer.
The biggest lock on the market comes from existing homeowners. Selling would mean taking on a new mortgage near 6.5%.
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Bright MLS chief economist Lisa Sturtevant described the situation bluntly: "While lower mortgage rates and more inventory will bring some buyers back, this will be a reset year, not a rebound year."
What the Numbers Show for Buyers
First-time buyers are feeling the squeeze. The average mortgage balance for a first-time buyer hit $334,000 in 2024, up from $240,000 in 2019 and $195,000 in 2014. Their average credit score has climbed to 734, up from 718, meaning only the most creditworthy can afford to enter. At the same time, their average zip-code income dropped to about $92,000 in 2024 from $100,000 in 2014, suggesting buyers are stretching further.
The share of household income going to mortgage payments at a 5% rate is 24%. Under Morgan Stanley's base case, that share falls to around 21%. That is still well above the 15% post-crisis average.
James Egan, Morgan Stanley's U.S. housing strategist, provided a stark example: a homeowner who bought in 2016 and refinanced during the pandemic would see their monthly housing obligation jump by about 200% - a dollar increase of $1,300 to $1,400 - if they sold and bought a comparable property today.
What to Watch
Morgan Stanley forecasts U.S. home prices will grow about 2% in 2026 and 3% in 2027, supported by tight lending and limited supply. Fannie Mae sees roughly 2% growth in 2026, while J.P. Morgan projects flat prices.
The message from Morgan Stanley is blunt: the broadly accessible homeownership conditions from the two decades before 2022 are not coming back.
Beyond the raw numbers, this shift carries deeper consequences. The lock-in effect - homeowners unwilling to give up sub-3% pandemic mortgages - has frozen inventory and amplified price pressures. Even if rates ease modestly, the combination of high prices, elevated insurance costs, and stricter lending standards means the typical buyer will need a much larger down payment and stronger credit profile than in prior decades. First-time buyers, in particular, face a market where the path to homeownership has narrowed considerably, forcing many to delay purchases or turn to more affordable regions.
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