The New Math of Owning a Home: What Property Taxes, Insurance, and HOA Fees Really Add Up To in 2026

Linda paid off her mortgage in 2019. She thought she was done. Six years later, her monthly housing bill is higher than it was when the bank still owned half the place — and her paycheck has not kept up.
Linda is not alone. In 2026, “mortgage paid off” no longer means “home paid for.”
The number that changed everything
 On April 9, ATTOM released its 2025 Property Tax Analysis. The headline: the average single-family home in America now carries a property tax bill of $4,427 a year — up 3% from 2024 and an effective tax rate of 0.9%, the highest since 2020. Spread across 12 months, that is $369 every month for a bill that does not pay down principal, build equity, or give you anything back.
That was Wednesday. Thursday, April 10, the Bureau of Labor Statistics published its March CPI report. Consumer prices rose 0.9% in a single month. Real average hourly earnings fell 0.6%. The paycheck shrank while the bill got bigger — in the span of 24 hours.
If owning a home feels more expensive every year, it is not you. The math actually changed.
Where the biggest bills live
 Property tax pain is not evenly distributed. ATTOM’s data shows the highest average bills concentrated in the Northeast:
- New Jersey — $10,499/year
- Connecticut — $8,901/year
- New Hampshire — $8,174/year
- Massachusetts — $7,904/year
- New York — $7,732/year
By effective tax rate, Illinois leads the country at 1.84%, followed by New Jersey at 1.58%, Vermont at 1.4%, and Connecticut at 1.36%. For a homeowner in one of these states, property tax alone can run $800 to $1,000 a month — more than many mortgage payments did twenty years ago.
The full monthly math
Property tax is one line. Here is the full carrying cost of owning a typical U.S. single-family home in 2026:
 That is before a mortgage. Before utilities. Before groceries. On a paid-off home, that is the housing bill. And unlike a mortgage, none of it builds equity.
Run the numbers on your own home
 National averages are a starting point, not an answer. Your state, your insurance quote, and your HOA fees all move the line. We built a simple True-Cost of Homeownership Calculator so you can plug in your numbers and see your actual monthly carrying cost in under 30 seconds.
The equity-rich, cash-poor shape
Here is the quiet story of 2026: a growing number of homeowners are sitting on more wealth than they have ever had — and less monthly breathing room than they have ever had.
Home values held. Property taxes followed home values up. Homeowners insurance premiums jumped 12% in 2025 alone, and Insurify projects another 4% increase this year — a 46% total rise since 2021. Real wages slipped in March. Stack those four things together and you get a specific shape: equity-rich, cash-poor.
It is not failure. It is not bad budgeting. It is the gap between what your house is worth on paper and what you can actually access without moving. For a retiree on a fixed income, or a middle-income household whose raises have not kept pace with inflation, that gap shows up as stress — the kind that keeps you refreshing your checking account before auto-pay hits.
Your options when the math stops working
 If the house is paid off (or nearly so) and the carrying costs feel heavier every year, you have more choices than most people realize:
1. Home equity loan or HELOC. You borrow against your equity. You keep the house, you keep the tax and insurance bills, and you add a new monthly payment on top of everything else.
2. Reverse mortgage. Only available at age 62+. Converts equity into cash, but fees are steep and it reduces what you can leave to heirs.
3. Downsize and move. Sell outright, pocket the difference, buy something smaller. Solves the cash problem and costs you the home, the neighborhood, and the move itself.
4. Sale-leaseback. Sell the home to an investor, receive your equity as cash, and stay in the house as a renter. You keep the address. The property tax, insurance, and maintenance line items move off your books. Your new housing cost becomes one predictable monthly rent.
That fourth option is what Sell2Rent exists to do.
You do not have to leave to breathe again
 Linda , the real version of her, and the thousands of homeowners like her, did not want to move. She wanted the finish line she thought she crossed in 2019. A sale-leaseback gave her that: same house, same neighborhood, same bed, minus the property tax bill, minus the insurance premium, minus the roof-replacement fund.
If the new math of owning your home is not working anymore, it might not be a problem with your budget. It might be a problem with the model.
And the model has options.
Ready to see what your home could free up every month?
 Get your free cash offer →
No showings. No moving trucks. No pressure. Just clarity on what your equity is worth — and what staying home, on your terms, could look like.
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