Trump’s 50-Year Mortgage: The New Deal for the Next Century
President Trump’s 50-year mortgage proposal represents a natural evolution of a uniquely American idea. In the 1930s, Franklin D. Roosevelt’s introduction of the 30-year mortgage under the New Deal made homeownership attainable for millions. Before the Depression, mortgages lasted three to five years, demanded 40% to 50% down payments, and required a balloon payment at maturity. Few could qualify. When the housing market collapsed, millions lost their homes. FDR’s creation of the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage reversed that decline. By spreading repayment over three decades, the New Deal allowed working families to own homes, not merely rent them. Homeownership rates rose from roughly 44% in 1940 to 62% by 1960. Trump’s proposal to extend the same principle to a 50-year mortgage applies this proven logic to the affordability crisis of the twenty-first century.
FDR’s critics said that a 30-year loan would create “permanent debt” and distort the private market. They were wrong. The system stabilized housing, revived construction, and built the modern middle class. Trump’s critics are making the same mistake. They warn that 50-year mortgages will trap Americans in endless payments, but history suggests otherwise. The 30-year loan was once radical; today it is the gold standard. Extending the term simply reflects new realities: higher home prices, longer lifespans, and slower income growth. A young couple in their twenties could buy a home with a 50-year loan, build equity over time, and refinance to a shorter term when their earnings increase. In effect, the 50-year mortgage is a ladder, not a leash.
Other Developed Nations Have Already Done This
Other developed nations already recognize this logic. Japan has offered 100-year intergenerational mortgages. Sweden’s banks for years allowed amortization schedules stretching to a century. France, Spain, and Mexico all support 50-year mortgages in their lending markets. These countries demonstrate that longer mortgage terms are neither exotic nor reckless. The difference lies in regulation. Where guardrails exist, requiring amortization, stable rates, and prudent loan-to-value ratios, long-term loans can expand ownership without creating bubbles. Where they do not, as in Spain’s pre-2008 market, speculation takes hold. Trump’s plan can learn from these experiences. Properly structured, a 50-year mortgage could extend affordability without repeating the mistakes of the past.
Critics argue that extending mortgage terms inflates housing prices. This claim confuses cause and effect. The real driver of rising prices is a shortage of housing, not the length of mortgages. Supply constraints, from zoning restrictions to environmental litigation, have throttled new construction. Making financing more flexible without addressing supply does not cause inflation in itself; it merely exposes the scarcity. To the extent that the 50-year mortgage reveals the need for new housing, it can serve as a catalyst for reform. Paired with Trump’s deregulatory agenda, reducing red tape for builders and unlocking federal land for development, it can unleash new supply while widening access to ownership.
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Still, the policy must be designed with safeguards. The first guardrail should be full amortization. Every 50-year mortgage should pay down principal from day one. Sweden learned that interest-only loans can turn households into perpetual tenants. Mandating minimum annual amortization protects both borrower and lender by ensuring that equity builds steadily. The second guardrail should be transparent refinancing and prepayment terms. Borrowers should have the freedom to pay faster or refinance without penalty. A family that begins with a 50-year mortgage in their twenties could refinance to a 30-year loan in their thirties or forties as income rises. The flexibility of refinancing is key to turning long-term mortgages into vehicles for upward mobility rather than permanent debt.
A third safeguard is conservative loan-to-value limits. No system should encourage 100% financing. Requiring even modest down payments, say, 5% or 10%, gives borrowers skin in the game and prevents speculative excess. Canada, which once offered 40-year mortgages, kept defaults low by combining longer terms with strict underwriting. When the market overheated, it tightened rules without abandoning innovation. America can do the same. The goal is not to subsidize risk but to calibrate opportunity.
A fourth reform concerns the structure of mortgage finance itself. The US should move toward the Danish covered bond system, replacing the inefficient and distortion-prone FHA model. Denmark funds long-term fixed-rate mortgages through mortgage banks that issue bonds matched exactly to each loan’s cash flow. This “balance principle” ensures that lenders cannot overextend themselves and that borrowers can prepay or refinance freely. There are no government guarantees for ordinary mortgages, yet Danish default rates are among the lowest in the world. Adopting such a model could reduce systemic risk, shrink taxpayer exposure, and eliminate the need for vast federal insurance schemes. In short, we could modernize our system while making it more stable.
The Danish model also fosters market discipline. Because each mortgage is tied to a tradable bond, investors directly price the risk, and borrowers benefit from transparent rates. If Trump’s administration encouraged US lenders to adopt covered bonds for 50-year loans, the market would quickly attract long-horizon investors such as pension funds and insurers. These institutions already seek stable, predictable yields across decades. A 50-year mortgage market would match their needs perfectly. It would also deepen capital markets and provide new tools for long-term savings and investment.
This is Not about Federal Control of Your Mortgage
Some conservatives recoil at the notion of a government role in such innovation, arguing that it would extend the reach of the state. Yet they forget that FDR’s 30-year mortgage was a government-led reform that enabled capitalism to flourish. It did not nationalize housing; it stabilized it. Likewise, Trump’s 50-year proposal would not expand Washington’s control but would empower individuals by increasing choice. The key is to frame the reform as deregulation, removing the Dodd-Frank prohibition on mortgage terms beyond 30 years, and allowing lenders to compete in designing new products. The government’s role should be to clear the path, not dictate the terms.
Critics on both sides misunderstand the purpose of the 50-year mortgage. It is not meant to encourage endless borrowing, nor to replace fiscal prudence with leverage. It is meant to give working families a foothold in an economy where home prices have decoupled from wages. Inflation and regulatory scarcity have priced millions out of the market. A 50-year mortgage rebalances the equation. It allows a nurse, a teacher, or a young tradesman to buy a starter home in their twenties rather than renting indefinitely. Over time, rising incomes and inflation reduce the real burden of the fixed payment, just as they did for the 30-year borrowers of the postwar era. Homeownership builds wealth, community stability, and civic responsibility. Rentership builds dependence. That distinction is at the heart of conservative housing policy.
There are those who say the US should focus on lowering interest rates instead of lengthening terms. But interest rates are beyond any administration’s direct control. Mortgage duration, however, is a lever policymakers can pull. By extending repayment periods, we can reduce monthly costs even when rates remain high. A 50-year mortgage at 6.5% interest yields a monthly payment roughly 10% lower than a 30-year loan on the same principal. For many families, that difference determines whether they can buy or not. In a time when housing affordability is at a 40-year low, every bit of relief matters.
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Skeptics might object that most Americans move every 10 to 12 years, making a 50-year term meaningless. But the ability to refinance or transfer the loan to a new buyer changes the calculus. If 50-year loans are made assumable, a home could be sold with its low-rate financing intact. Buyers could step into existing mortgages rather than taking on new ones at higher rates. This would enhance market liquidity and reduce the “lock-in effect” that traps homeowners when rates rise. Once again, the Danish system offers a model: their loans are not only prepayable but also portable. Trump’s policy could borrow that flexibility to make 50-year mortgages a dynamic, mobile instrument of ownership.
The larger conservative argument for the 50-year mortgage is one of freedom and responsibility. The government should not dictate how long Americans may take to repay their homes. The current 30-year limit is a relic of postwar regulation, enshrined in the Dodd-Frank “qualified mortgage” rule. Removing that cap simply restores consumer choice. A free society allows individuals to decide whether a shorter or longer loan suits their family. Government’s proper role is to ensure transparency, not paternalism. As with investment choices or retirement planning, citizens should have options across the spectrum, from 15 to 50 years.
At its core, Trump’s plan is not radical but restorative. It revives the spirit of FDR’s innovation while updating it for modern realities. It seeks to expand ownership, reduce barriers, and strengthen families without resorting to subsidies or new entitlements. It recognizes that homeownership remains the cornerstone of the American Dream. A policy that helps more Americans achieve it deserves bipartisan support. In 1934, critics warned that FDR’s 30-year mortgage would destroy the lending industry. Instead, it built a middle class. In 2025, critics will say Trump’s 50-year mortgage will do the same. They will be just as wrong.
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