Minimum Down Payment

Categories: Mortgage

To get the most favorable mortgage terms, most banks will require 20% as the minimum down payment on a home. And having minimums like this makes sense. If a home costs $300,000 and the buyer just put down $60,000, then the bank's risk is relatively low. If after three years the buyer just walks away from the home (they'll have paid down another $10,000 of the principal), then the bank is exposed $230,000 on a home that three years earlier sold for $300,000.

In most markets, that home is now worth meaningfully more than $300,000. That is, if the home just went up with inflation at 2.5-ish%, then it'd be worth $310,000 or so. Even after lawyer costs and commissions paid to realtors and so on, the bank gets its money back. Hence, for low-risk-seeking banks (or creditors of other kinds like for cars, boats, planes, trains, etc.), the lender may require high minimum down payments, just because they are Nellies (nervous ones).

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)