May 14, 2024
Jaime Seale shared with BLACK ENTERPRISE that more non-Black millennials will continue their home search while prices and interest rates are high.
Originally Published Jan. 26, 2023.
In 2023, 34% of Black millennials had at least $10,000 in non-mortgage debt this year, a staggering 60% drop from 2022.
The finding raises the question of whether those millennials erased their debt. It’s possible, but real estate expert Jaime Seale explained it’s more likely that as inflation pushed up home prices and interest rates, millennials with large amounts of debt dropped out of the home search and postponed their purchase.
Contrarily, 46% of all millennials had a minimum of $10,000 in debt in 2023, down from about 71% last year.
Seale, author of the Millennial Home Buyer Report: 2023 Edition, told BLACK ENTERPRISE that more non-Black millennials will continue their home search while prices and interest rates are high.
Individuals quizzed in Seale’s report were asked about their homebuying plans this year. Black millennials (30%) are more concerned than their non-Black peers (29%) about qualifying for a mortgage. Seale said Black millennials tend to have lower credit scores than their white counterparts and are 2.5 times more likely to be rejected for mortgage loans.
“It’s important for Black millennials to get mortgages to help them afford homes because owning a home is one of the best ways to build generational wealth,” she notes. In 2019, Black homeowners had a median household wealth of $113,130—more than 60 times higher than Black renters.
To help attain homeownership, Black millennials are putting down less of a down payment.
A key reason: Debt is a major hurdle to saving for a down payment, and saving such is one of the top three barriers to buying a home for Black millennials. Some 42% report interest rates are too high and 38% cite both homes being too expensive and saving for a down payment as obstacles.
Around 73% of Black millennials plan to put down less than 20% for a down payment, versus 62% of all millennials. Seale says it is possible that saving for a down payment is more difficult because Black millennials typically earn less than their white counterparts and have more debt.
She made clear Black millennials who don’t put down a full 20% may have a higher interest rate because banks assume more risk. And with less money spent on a home purchase, Black millennials are more likely to buy less costly homes. Seale says nearly 23% of millennials plan on buying a home that costs more than the national median of $455,000, but only 8% of Black millennials plan to do the same.
More specifically, she says, 18% of Black millennials (versus 13% of all millennials) plan to buy a home in the $100,000 to $149,999 range this year. Some 16% of Black millennials (compared to 9% of all millennials) plan to buy a home in the $200,000 to $249,999 range.
Black millennials also are less inclined to risk their money given inflation and high-interest rates make home-buying even more unaffordable. For instance, Seale added  65% of all millennials would buy a fixer-upper, but only 58% of Black millennials would take that gamble. Some 40% of Black millennials fear having to make major repairs, and 39% worry about the hidden costs of homeownership.
Here are some tips Seale offered for buying a home:
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