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The average American mortgage balance reached $258,214 in mid-2025.
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Mortgage balances vary widely by age: Millennials carry the most mortgage debt of any generation, nearly $125,000 more than Baby Boomers.
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New homebuyers in December had a median monthly payment of $2,025.
Americans with mortgages already know the sting of the modern housing market. What they might not know is how their pain compares to everyone else’s.
The average American with a mortgage carried a balance of $258,214 as of mid-2025—a figure that’s jumped 26% since 2019. For those who bought recently, the hit is more immediate: the median monthly mortgage payment for new buyers in December 2025 reached $2,025. That’s over $24,000 a year, before taxes, insurance, or a busted water heater.
But the national average hides a lot of variance among generations, localities, and income.
Americans collectively owe $13.17 trillion in mortgage debt, about 70% of the $18.8 trillion in household debt the Federal Reserve Bank of New York recorded in the last quarter of 2025.
Mortgage debt is very different for Americans who bought before and after the pandemic. Homeowners who bought or refinanced before 2022 locked in rates below 3%, giving them lower mortgage payments.
Those who bought in the years since have faced a different reality entirely, absorbing both surging home prices and mortgage rates that peaked at more than 8%. The average new buyer mortgage payment of more than $2,000 is the new cost of entry.
The result is that many homeowners are reluctant to trade a 3% rate for a 6% one—that’s called the “lock-in effect,” and it’s reshaping who’s buying and who’s staying put. New mortgage originations hit $524 billion in the fourth quarter of 2025 alone, meaning first-time buyers and those who have no choice are still stepping in, just at a steeper price..
As interest rates and mortgage costs rise, so are delinquencies: about 58,000 Americans had new foreclosure notations added to their credit reports last quarter.
An Investopedia analysis of 2024 U.S. Census data shows that the oldest homeowners carry the smallest mortgage balances of any generation, and the youngest homeowners are the most likely to be burdened by housing costs.
Millennials have the highest average mortgage balances at $320,027, according to Experian. Gen X averages $286,574, slightly below Millennials, even as that generation leads all others in total debt.
On the other end, Baby Boomers and the Silent Generation carry mortgage balances that look manageable on paper—$196,227 and $148,514, respectively—but that picture shifts when you look at how much housing costs are eating into fixed incomes.
