50-year mortgage: Housing director calls Trump’s idea ‘complete game changer’

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FILE – A “For Sale” sign outside a house in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2025. Photographer: Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images

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Amid a slumping housing market, President Donald Trump over the weekend floated the idea of introducing a 50-year mortgage – and appears to have the support of the federal housing agency. 

Here’s what’s being said about the idea: 

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50-year mortgage

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What they’re saying:

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On Saturday, Trump posted on social media a meme introducing the idea of a 50-year mortgage, as President Franklin D. Roosevelt introduced the 30-year mortgage. 

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William Pulte, director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, reposted the meme saying his agency was “indeed” working on a 50-year mortgage – calling it a game changer. 

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“We are also working on ways to give relief in the 5 year mortgage, the 10 year mortgage, and the 15 year mortgage,” Pulte added in another post on X

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Why you should care:

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A 50-year mortgage would make affording a home more attainable for some Americans, as it would lower the monthly payment. 

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Dig deeper:

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A longer mortgage means the homeowner has a longer time to spread out his or her repayment of the loan, in a process known as amortization. The process includes a fixed monthly payment in conjunction with the interest repayment.

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The other side:

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Longer mortgages come with higher interest rates and repayments, meaning the homeowner would pay a higher total cost for the house over time than a homeowner with a shorter mortgage. 

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By the numbers:

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For a sample $400,000 loan with a 6% interest rate, a simple comparison using an amortization calculator shows you’d get a monthly mortgage payment of $2,398 under a 30-year loan, and $2,105 under a 50-year loan. Those numbers do not include taxes or insurance. 

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The interest paid under a 30-year loan calculates to $463,352, and calculates to nearly double that at $863,371 under a 50-year loan. 

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RELATED: Potential homebuyers are giving up, survey finds

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2025 housing market

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