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The Investment Most People Overlook: Why Your Home Can Outperform Your 401(k) - 6/3/2026

Most of us grow up hearing the same message: "Max out your 401(k). It's the best investment you can make."  And it's true—401(k)s are powerful, tax‑advantaged vehicles designed to grow steadily over time.  But here's what many people never hear:

A home is also a tax‑advantaged investment and for many families, it delivers even stronger long‑term wealth gains than retirement accounts.

Today, we'll walk through a real‑world example showing how using $40,000 from a 401(k) to purchase a home (under a hypothetical tax‑free withdrawal allowance) may generate a much higher return than leaving that same money invested in a retirement account.

The Scenario

You withdraw $40,000 from your 401(k) penalty‑free to help buy a home—something that may be possible under a proposed exemption from President Trump's housing plan.

You use it as the down payment on a $400,000 home with:

  • 90% mortgage ($360,000)
  • 30‑year fixed rate (assumed 6%)
  • Home appreciation of 3% per year
  • Compare alternative at end of 7 years

Meanwhile, the alternative is leaving that $40,000 in your 401(k), earning a long‑term average of 8% per year.

How Your Home Performs Over 7 Years

  1. Future Value of the Home with 3% annual appreciation after 7 years is $491,600.
  2. The Remaining Mortgage Balance at the end of 7 years is $325,000.
  3. Your Equity Position after 7 years, (), is $166,600 (.)This is your wealth

    Comparatively, the $40,000 in your 401(k), If left untouched at 8% for 7 years, would be worth $68,552.  The Net Wealth Difference is $98,048

Why the Home Wins: The Hidden Wealth Engine

  1. Appreciation Happens on the Entire Home Value.  A 3% return on $400,000, not just your $40,000, is real leverage.
  2. Mortgage Payments Build Wealth because of amortization where a part of every payment reduces the loan, forcing disciplined savings.
  3. Much like a 401(k), there are tax advantages in a principal residence.
    • Home appreciation is not taxed until sale
    • Capital‑gains exclusions can protect $250k...$500k of profit
    • Mortgage interest remains tax‑beneficial for many households
    • Property taxes may be deductible
  4. Housing Provides Utility Value because a 401(k) can't shelter you, but a home provides stability, locks in your housing cost, protects you from rising rent, and creates generational wealth opportunities.

The Big Picture

Your 401(k) should absolutely remain part of your long-term strategy. However, a home isn't just a place to live, it is one of the most powerful wealth‑building tools available to the average household.

In this scenario, choosing the home increased long‑term wealth by nearly $100,000 more than keeping the money invested in the 401(k).  In this hypothetical comparison, the 401(k) earns 8% long term. On the other hand, if the money was used to buy a $400,000 home that appreciated 3% a year, the annual rate of return on the down payment would be 19.2%.

This is achieved by leverage from the mortgage. The appreciation applies to the entire $400,000 asset, not just your $40,000 unlike the 401(k), and the loan amortization adds equity as the mortgage is paid down.

If you're considering whether to use retirement funds to buy a home, through borrowing against your 401(k) or withdraw without penalty as new policy proposals may soon allow, it's worth running the math. For many families, the home isn't just a lifestyle decision; it's the financial engine that drives long‑term stability and prosperity.

John Sieling CRS, NAR Green, EcoBroker Branch Real Estate Gresham, OR (650) 464-6355 John is a 20 year real estate veteran licensed as a Principal Broker in Oregon and a Managing Broker in Washington. That deep education and experience ensures you will be well served no matter the situation. He's equally at home helping you with single family homes, condominiums, vacant land and investment properties. John takes his work and clients seriously, treating every person as a unique individual with their own real estate dreams. His favorite part of being a Real Estate Agent is seeing the happiness on a client's face when he helps them achieve their goals. "Every client and every situation is different, so I never take a cookie-cutter approach" says John, "I'll work with you in whatever way you prefer, from providing communication and guidance to negotiating transactions." Prior to his real estate career John worked in the high tech publishing industry giving him an intimate understanding of marketing, media and promotion. He served in sales and sales management roles at GamePro, InformationWeek, CNet and the Financial Times. Visit my Website Send a Referral