Advertiser Disclosure
GOBankingRates works with many financial advertisers to showcase their products and services to our audiences. These brands compensate us to advertise their products in ads across our site. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site. We are not a comparison-tool and these offers do not represent all available deposit, investment, loan or credit products.
How Long Would It Take You To Save for a $500K Home in the Midwest?
Written by
Travis Woods
Edited by
Chris Cluff

Commitment to Our Readers
GOBankingRates' editorial team is committed to bringing you unbiased reviews and information. We use data-driven methodologies to evaluate financial products and services - our reviews and ratings are not influenced by advertisers. You can read more about our editorial guidelines and our products and services review methodology.
20 YearsHelping You Live Richer
Reviewed by Experts
Trusted by Millions of Readers
Buying a home in today’s housing market, with its post-COVID era mortgage rates, can certainly be difficult (and pricey). Let’s say you locate your dream home in the lovely American Midwest for $500,000 — how long would it take you save up the 20% down payment ($100,000) for such a house?
Recently, GOBankingRates compiled the median income for a single person in each state in America, per the U.S. Census Bureau. With that information, the yearly savings amount of 20% of that income was calculated per state (also factoring in a monthly mortgage rate of $2,619 per state).
From that matrix, GOBankingRates was able to project just how long it would take you to save the 20% down payment needed for a $500,000 dream house in each Midwestern state.
Illinois
- Median income for single person: $48,992
- Yearly savings for 20% down payment: $7,812
- How many years to save up down payment: 12.8
Indiana
- Median income for single person: $40,986
- Yearly savings for 20% down payment: $6,609
- How many years to save up down payment: 15.1
Iowa
- Median income for single person: $43,273
- Yearly savings for 20% down payment: $7,116
- How many years to save up down payment: 14.1
Kansas
- Median income for single person: $42,323
- Yearly savings for 20% down payment: $6,858
- How many years to save up down payment: 14.6
Michigan
- Median income for single person: $42,017
- Yearly savings for 20% down payment: $6,756
- How many years to save up down payment: 14.8
Minnesota
- Median income for single person: $51,687
- Yearly savings for 20% down payment: $8,290
- How many years to save up down payment: 12.1
Missouri
- Median income for single person: $40,443
- Yearly savings for 20% down payment: $6,711
- How many years to save up down payment: 14.9
Nebraska
- Median income for single person: $43,148
- Yearly savings for 20% down payment: $7,057
- How many years to save up down payment: 14.2
North Dakota
- Median income for single person: $45,414
- Yearly savings for 20% down payment: $7,694
- How many years to save up down payment: 13.0
Ohio
- Median income for single person: $41,653
- Yearly savings for 20% down payment: $6,808
- How many years to save up down payment: 14.7
South Dakota
- Median income for single person: $43,596
- Yearly savings for 20% down payment: $7,402
- How many years to save up down payment: 13.5
Wisconsin
- Median income for single person: $46,629
- Yearly savings for 20% down payment: $7,550
- How many years to save up down payment: 13.2
Methodology: For this piece, GOBankingRates first found median income for a single person (defined in the American Community Survey as “non-family households”) for each state, as sourced from the 2023 American Community Survey as conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau. GOBankingRates then set the down payment at 20% and assumed a person would be following the 50/30/20 rule where 20% of post-tax income goes toward savings and debt repayment. GOBankingRates then calculated how long it would take a single person in each state following the 50/30/20 rule to save for the down payment ($100,000) on a $500,000 home. From there GOBankingRates also calculated the 30-year fixed mortgage on a $500,000 home, assuming no private mortgage insurance, no homeowner’s association fees and no property tax, with a rate of 6.84% as sourced from Freddie Mac. All data was collected on and is up to date as of June 12, 2025.
Share This Article:
You May Also Like
Retirees Should Avoid Renting in These 4 California Cities With the Most Competition
December 04, 2025
4 min Read
Ramsey Expert Calls Trump's 50-Year Mortgage a 'Horrible Idea' -- 3 Experts Weigh In
December 04, 2025
4 min Read
I'm a Real Estate Agent: 5 Housing Market Trends To Prepare for in 2026
November 25, 2025
4 min Read
3 Expensive Historic Estates for Sale That Look Straight Out of a Movie
November 26, 2025
4 min Read
ChatGPT Answers What Trump's 50-Year Mortgages Could Mean for Home Prices
November 26, 2025
4 min Read
Make your money work for you
Get the latest news on investing, money, and more with our free newsletter.
By subscribing, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Unsubscribe at any time.

Thanks!
You're now subscribed to our newsletter.
Check your inbox for more details.

Sending you timely financial stories that you can bank on.
Sign up for our daily newsletter for the latest financial news and trending topics.
For our full Privacy Policy, click here.
Looks like you're using an adblocker
Please disable your adblocker to enjoy the optimal web experience and access the quality content you appreciate from GOBankingRates.
- AdBlock / uBlock / Brave
- Click the ad blocker extension icon to the right of the address bar
- Disable on this site
- Refresh the page
- Firefox / Edge / DuckDuckGo
- Click on the icon to the left of the address bar
- Disable Tracking Protection
- Refresh the page
- Ghostery
- Click the blue ghost icon to the right of the address bar
- Disable Ad-Blocking, Anti-Tracking, and Never-Consent
- Refresh the page


