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Warren Buffett sends blunt message on mortgages, home financing

finance.yahoo.com · Fri, May 8, 2026 at 10:07 PM GMT+8

Most people think of a mortgage as a burden. A monthly obligation. A debt to be paid off as quickly as possible. Warren Buffett sees it differently. And his reasoning is worth understanding in any rate environment.

The Berkshire Hathaway chairman has been making the same argument for decades. He believes the 30-year fixed mortgage is one of the most advantageous financial instruments available to ordinary homebuyers. Not despite the debt, but because of it.

"One of the reasons a home is a terrific buy is because of the 30-year mortgage," Buffett said, according to Benzinga.

He went further. "A 30-year mortgage is the best instrument in the world. Because if you're wrong and rates go to 2%, which I don't think they will, you pay it off. It's a one-way renegotiation. It is an incredibly attractive instrument for the homeowner and you've got a one-way bet," Buffett said.

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The logic is structural. A borrower locks in a rate for 30 years. If rates fall later, the loan can be refinanced into a lower rate. If rates rise, the original rate stays intact.

The homeowner can benefit from either scenario, but is only locked in on the downside. That asymmetry is what Buffett calls the "one-way bet."

Buffett did not just describe the strategy. He used it. When he purchased a Laguna Beach home in 1971 for $150,000, he chose to finance it through Great Western Savings and Loans rather than pay cash outright. He kept only about $30,000 of equity in the property at the time, according to Benzinga.

"It's the only mortgage I've had for 50 years," Buffett said. The decision to borrow was deliberate. By financing the home rather than paying cash, he preserved capital that could be deployed elsewhere. In Buffett's framework, tying up all available cash in a single home purchase is not the most efficient use of money, even for someone who can afford to pay in full.

That is the capital allocation lesson embedded in his mortgage philosophy. It is not about avoiding debt. It is about keeping money available for other uses while letting fixed-rate borrowing do the heavy lifting on the real estate side.

Buffett's framework also has an inflation dimension that most buyers overlook. A 30-year fixed mortgage means the same nominal payment every month for three decades. But the dollars used to make those payments in year 25 are likely to be worth less in real terms than the dollars used in year one.

That dynamic works in the borrower's favor over time. In inflationary environments, fixed debt becomes relatively cheaper to service as wages and prices rise, while the monthly payment stays flat. Buffett has referenced this explicitly as one of the reasons he sees fixed-rate borrowing as a hedge.

The rate history supports the logic. In the early 1980s, 30-year mortgage rates climbed above 18%. Homeowners who locked in high fixed rates before that period watched their neighbors pay even more.

Decades later, rates fell to around 3% during the pandemic era, giving anyone with a higher fixed rate the option to refinance at a lower rate. Each cycle rewarded the borrower who locked in early, according to Benzinga.

Buffett reinforced the same view years later in a 2013 interview on Fox Business following the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting. "Anybody who's borrowing money should borrow out for a long period of time. And if you ever want to get a mortgage, today is the day to get a mortgage," he said.

He added that low rates "won't go on forever," reinforcing the value of locking in long-term financing rather than waiting or trying to time the market. The comment was made when rates were historically low, but the underlying logic applies in any environment where fixed-rate borrowing is available.

Current 30-year fixed mortgage rates: In the mid-6% range as of May 2026, elevated compared to prior years but still offering fixed-rate certainty, according to Benzinga

Buffett's Laguna Beach home purchase: $150,000 in 1971, financed through Great Western Savings and Loans, keeping roughly $30,000 in equity at the time, Benzinga confirmed

Pandemic-era 30-year mortgage rate low: Approximately 3%, illustrating the refinancing benefit Buffett described for borrowers who had locked in higher rates, according to Yahoo Finance

Buffett's 2017 CNBC description of owning a home: "If you know you're going to live in a given area, or think it's very likely, for a considerable period of time and you've got a family, the home is terrific," CNBC reported

With 30-year rates currently sitting in the mid-6% range, Buffett's framework faces a harder test.

Affordability is more strained. Monthly payments are higher. And the pool of buyers who can comfortably absorb a fixed payment at current rates is smaller than it was when rates were near historic lows.

But the core logic has not changed. A buyer who locks in at 6.5% today and holds for 20 years will benefit if rates fall and refinancing becomes attractive. If rates rise further, the 6.5% is protected. The one-way bet structure Buffett described still applies. The bet just starts from a higher baseline.

The discipline Buffett attaches to this view is also important. He is not endorsing mortgages as a way to buy more house than you can afford. His argument is specifically for buyers who can comfortably carry the payment, who plan to stay in the home for a meaningful period, and who would rather keep cash available than tie it all up in a single asset.

Those conditions have not changed. The rate environment has.

Related: How April Fed meeting impacts mortgage rates, housing market

This story was originally published by TheStreet on May 8, 2026, where it first appeared in the Investing section. Add TheStreet as a Preferred Source by clicking here.