---
title: "Big Homeowner Energy: How Gen Z Is Buying Houses (Even in This Economy)"
url: "https://servingsandiegocounty.com/how-gen-z-is-buying-houses-even-in-this-economy/"
post_type: "post"
date_published: "2026-07-15T06:00:58+00:00"
date_modified: "2026-07-08T09:40:50+00:00"
categories: ["Buy a Home", "Buyers"]
---

# Big Homeowner Energy: How Gen Z Is Buying Houses (Even in This Economy)

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If you think homeownership is out of reach for Gen Z, here&#8217;s a number worth knowing: Gen Z now makes up 4% of home buyers, up from 3% last year. That&#8217;s still small, but it&#8217;s growing, even with home prices near record highs. Many of these buyers are doing it alone, on one income, without help from their parents.
Homeownership isn&#8217;t a myth for this generation. It just looks different than it used to.
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Here&#8217;s what Gen Z home buyers are doing to buy a home.
They use down payment assistance
Gen Z uses down payment assistance programs more than any other generation. These are usually run by states, cities, or nonprofits, and often cover 3–5% of the home price as a grant or low-interest loan. They can often be paired with low-down-payment loans like FHA (3.5% down), USDA (0% down in some areas), or VA loans. Learn more here.
According to the National Association of Realtors (NAR), Gen Z relies less on cash gifts from parents than millennials do. This generation is leaning on programs, not family money.
They&#8217;re open to moving somewhere cheaper
Gen Z buyers aren&#8217;t tied to expensive cities. Many are finding success in more affordable places like Indianapolis, St. Louis, Pittsburgh, and Kansas City, where homes can go for $185,000–$230,000. Some buy where it&#8217;s affordable now, then figure out their job situation around that.
They buy small and build equity early
Instead of waiting for a dream home, Gen Z buyers often choose something smaller, a typical purchase is about 1,600 square feet. Buying earlier, even small, gives your money more time to grow. The median homeowner&#8217;s net worth is about 40 times that of a renter.
They get creative
Some strategies showing up again and again:

Co-buying with a friend or family member. About a third of Gen Z say they&#8217;re considering it
House hacking. Buying a duplex, living in one unit, and renting the other to help cover the mortgage
A parent co-signing without living in the home
Working a side job specifically to save for a home. More than a quarter of Gen Z say they&#8217;re doing this

They see a home as a way to build wealth
About 87% of Gen Z say homeownership is important for building wealth, not just a lifestyle milestone. That mindset is why many are willing to buy something smaller, in a less exciting city, on one income. The real goal isn&#8217;t the perfect house. It&#8217;s the equity and stability that come from owning instead of renting.
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Do they have family money behind them?
Mostly, no. The &#8220;Great Wealth Transfer&#8221;, trillions of dollars moving from older Americans to their kids is real, but it&#8217;s concentrated at the top. Households worth $10 million or more, just 2% of all U.S. households, are expected to receive over half of that money. Most of what&#8217;s transferring right now is also going to Gen X and older millennials first, not Gen Z. And only 13% of Gen Z buyers got a cash gift from family, actually less than millennials.
Most Gen Z homeowners are buying without inherited wealth which is exactly why the strategies above matter so much.
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Is this possible in San Diego?
San Diego is one of the most expensive markets in the country, so it&#8217;s a fair test. The median single-family home runs around $1,050,000, and only about 11–15% of local households can afford that.
It&#8217;s still possible, but it takes two things: being flexible about where in the county you buy, and stacking every assistance program you can find.
What makes it work:

Look at condos, not the median single-family home. Attached homes like condos, townhomes had a countywide median closer to $660,000, well below the single-family number.
Stack assistance programs. San Diego County&#8217;s First-Time Homebuyer program offers a deferred loan of up to 22% of the purchase price for a down payment, plus help with closing costs, for homes up to $743,000 and buyers earning under 80% of the area&#8217;s typical income. This can often be combined with CalHFA&#8217;s MyHome program for even more help.
Use a low-down loan. FHA needs just 3.5% down, VA loans need 0% for eligible veterans. Combined with assistance programs, some buyers get in with well under $30,000 out of pocket instead of $100,000+.

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These are examples to show the shape of the math, not exact quotes — talk to a lender for your real numbers.

 
Typical San Diego home
Condo entry point
Condo + assistance stacked

Home price
~$1,050,000
~$650,000
~$650,000

Down payment
20% (~$210,000)
10% (~$65,000)
3.5% FHA (~$23,000)

Income needed
~$220,000+/year
Roughly $120,000/year alone, less with two incomes
About the same, assistance lowers the cash you need, not the income

This isn&#8217;t financial advice — talk to a local lender or housing counselor for numbers specific to you.
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San Diego County&#8217;s median household income is about $103,000. The national median Gen Z income is about $76,000. Neither is enough alone for a typical San Diego home which is why co-buying, dual incomes, or house hacking matter so much here specifically.
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It is not impossible. Prices are high, rates haven&#8217;t dropped much, and the typical first-time buyer today is about a decade older than in the past. Most Gen Zers who&#8217;ve bought a home didn&#8217;t get lucky. They made a plan, stayed patient, and compromised on location, size, or timing.
The Gen Zers buying homes right now don&#8217;t have trust funds. They treated it like a project: researched every assistance program, got comfortable buying alone, stayed open to a smaller home or a new city, and started before they felt fully &#8220;ready.&#8221;
If homeownership feels out of reach, remember: it feels that way to everyone buying a home today.
Navigating your very first home purchase takes time, strategy, and a clear understanding of the local landscape. As an experienced real estate team, we love helping the next generation of buyers map out a realistic timeline to achieve their goals. Reach out anytime.
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Sources
Fortune. &#8220;Gen Z Is Carving a Different Path in the Housing Market by Doing It Alone.&#8221; Fortune, 16 Apr. 2026, fortune.com/2026/04/16/gen-z-buys-homes-single-millennials-first-time-homebuyers/.
National Association of Realtors. &#8220;How Gen Z Buyers Are Succeeding in the Housing Market.&#8221; NAR.realtor, www.nar.realtor/magazine/real-estate-news/how-gen-z-buyers-are-succeeding-in-the-housing-market.
San Diego Real Estate Hunter. &#8220;San Diego Housing Market 2026: Forecast, Predictions &amp; Trends.&#8221; San Diego Real Estate Hunter, 16 May 2026, www.sandiegorealestatehunter.com/blog/san-diego-real-estate-market-forecast/.
