Beyond the Mortgage: What It Actually Costs to Own a Home in 2026

You did everything right. Saved for the down payment. Got the 30-year fixed. Made every payment on time.
So why does it feel like your home is costing more every single month, even though your mortgage hasn't changed?
Because the mortgage was never the full picture. According to Bankrate's latest study, the average U.S. homeowner now pays $21,400 per year in hidden costs beyond the mortgage: property taxes, insurance, maintenance, utilities, and more. That's roughly $1,783 every month that never showed up on the listing sheet.
And in 2026, almost every one of those line items is climbing.
This isn't about scaring you. It's about showing you the full math, so you can make a clear-eyed decision about what comes next.
Property Taxes: The Bill That Keeps Growing
Let's start with the one that hits hardest: property taxes.
Between 2019 and 2024, property taxes surged 30% nationwide. In 2025, Americans paid a combined $396.8 billion in property taxes on over 89.6 million single-family homes, an average of $4,427 per home, up 3.7% from the year before.
In 2026, the picture isn't getting better. Data shows a 9 to 15% jump in many metro areas, and 92% of major metros reported increases in the latest cycle. The root causes are structural: home values appreciated rapidly during the pandemic-era demand spike, and local governments are now reassessing those values upward to fund schools, infrastructure, and emergency services.
Some states are fighting back. Indiana, for example, passed a reform projected to save homeowners $1.3 billion over three years, starting with a 10% homestead credit in 2026. But for most homeowners, the trajectory is clear: property taxes are eating a bigger share of your budget every year, and there's no mortgage refinance that can fix it.
Homeowners Insurance: Five Straight Years of Increases
If you've opened your insurance renewal letter lately, you already know. Homeowners insurance premiums jumped 12% in 2025, and Insurify projects another 4% increase in 2026, bringing the national average to approximately $3,057 per year. That's the fifth consecutive year of increases.
The states getting hit the hardest may surprise you. In 2025, Minnesota saw a 34% spike, Colorado 33%, and Nebraska 25%. For 2026, California is projected to lead with a 16% hike, followed by Nebraska (13%), New Mexico (11%), and Georgia (10%). Florida remains the most expensive state overall, with average premiums approaching $8,500, more than double the national average.
What's driving it? Climate-related claims, rising rebuild costs, and reinsurance market pressure. The result: more than half of homeowners surveyed by Insurify said they've made financial sacrifices just to keep their coverage. Nearly three in ten said they'd drop coverage entirely if they could.
That's not a sign of a system working well. That's a cost crisis hiding in plain sight.
Maintenance and Repairs: Now With a Tariff Surcharge
Home maintenance already accounted for the single largest chunk of hidden costs: $8,808 per year on average, according to Bankrate. In 2026, that number is climbing thanks to a factor most homeowners didn't see coming: tariffs.
In 2025, duties on Canadian softwood lumber jumped to a combined 45% (a 35% Commerce duty plus a 10% Section 232 tariff). That matters because Canada supplies roughly 85% of all U.S. softwood lumber imports and about a quarter of total domestic supply. On top of that, kitchen cabinets and vanities now face duties as high as 50% as of January 2026.
The National Association of Home Builders estimates that tariffs alone add roughly $10,900 to the cost of a typical home, and that math applies to repairs and renovations, too. A roof replacement that would have cost $15,000 two years ago could easily run $18,000 to $20,000 today. Metal-based products face even steeper increases, with tariffs adding approximately 20% to base costs.
For homeowners on a fixed or limited income, one major repair (an HVAC failure, a plumbing emergency, a damaged roof) can unravel an entire year's budget.
Utilities and HOA Fees: The Slow Squeeze
These are the costs that creep. They don't spike dramatically in a single month; they just quietly grow, year after year, until you look back and realize you're paying significantly more than you were even three years ago.
Utilities
The average monthly residential electricity bill rose from $121 in 2021 to $156 in 2025, a 30% increase in just four years. The national average rate hit 18.05¢/kWh in April 2026, up 5.4% year-over-year. Regulators approved 43 rate hikes in 2025 alone, totaling $11.6 billion in increases affecting 56 million Americans.
The drivers aren't going away: aging infrastructure, volatile fuel prices, extreme weather events, and surging demand from data centers (projected to grow from 5% to 12% of total U.S. electricity use by 2030).
HOA Fees
If you live in an HOA community (and 43.6% of U.S. listings now include one), fees have risen 26% since 2019. The national average sits around $291 per month ($3,492 per year), with many markets seeing 8% annual increases. Bankrate has started calling HOA fees "shadow mortgages," and for good reason. Rising insurance premiums and stricter reserve requirements are forcing associations to pass those costs directly to homeowners.
Adding It All Up: The Real Cost of Owning in 2026
Without HOA fees, that's $21,400 per year ($1,783 per month) on top of your mortgage. With HOA fees, it can push past $25,000.
And here's what makes 2026 different from five years ago: these costs aren't just inflation. They're structural. Tariffs aren't temporary. Climate-driven insurance repricing isn't going to reverse. Property tax reassessments happen on cycles that only go up. Utility infrastructure needs don't shrink.
The math is changing, and for many homeowners, especially those on fixed incomes or approaching retirement, the gap between what their home costs and what their home gives back is widening.
You Have More Options Than You Think
If you're reading this and nodding along, if the numbers feel familiar because you've been living them, know this: you're not stuck.
A lot of homeowners assume there are only two choices: keep paying more every year, or sell and move. But there's a third option that more homeowners are exploring in 2026: sell your home, cash out your equity, and stay as a renter.
It's called a sale-leaseback. You unlock the wealth you've built in your home without giving up the home itself. No moving trucks. No leaving the neighborhood. No disrupting your kids' school or your daily routine. You get financial breathing room while keeping the life you've built.
At Sell2Rent, we've built a platform specifically for this. We connect homeowners with investors who purchase their property and lease it right back, so you stay home and breathe again.
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