First-time investors are currently experiencing a specific type of anxiety brought on by seeing mortgage rates hover above 6%, stock indexes fluctuate, and gold prices swing dramatically in a single afternoon. Everything seems shaky. Amidst all of that chaos, the question of whether real estate is still worthwhile keeps coming up in late-night Reddit threads, family dinners, and financial forums.
It’s a legitimate query. Furthermore, the truthful response isn’t a simple yes or no. The macro image is truly disorganized. Early in May, the Nasdaq fell even more, the S&P 500 fell 0.7% in a single session, and mortgage rates on 30-year fixed loans increased to about 6.37%. That rate increased to 6.43% by the middle of June. No one would feel comfortable writing a check for a down payment after seeing these figures. When you combine that with a housing inventory that has only slightly improved—up roughly 7.1% year over year as of February 2026, according to Forbes—you have a market that feels competitive, pricey, and a little draining.
Nevertheless, housing differs from nearly every other asset class due to its stubborn nature. Home prices across the country just don’t decline very frequently. The historical win rate for housing over longer holding periods is exceptionally high when looking back to the 1950s; in fact, it is higher than the stock market over similar timelines. This is more than just comforting trivia. It implies a structural aspect of property: land is not manufactured, and people will always need a place to live.

Since 1975, real estate has produced an average five-year return of about 26%, according to a Realtor.com analysis. According to the National Association of Realtors, the average homeowner has also amassed at least $147,000 in housing wealth in just the last five years. These figures are not abstract. That is equity that is gradually compounding inside walls and foundations.
The level of control that property gives you is what really sets it apart from stocks. You are essentially a passenger when it comes to stocks. Rent increases, kitchen upgrades, refinancing when interest rates drop, and finding a better tenant are all possible with a rental property. In the words of real estate investor and broker Dan Reedy, a brokerage account will never allow you to actively control your returns. Additionally, investors in other asset classes frequently ignore tax considerations like depreciation write-offs and mortgage interest deductions until it’s too late.
However, avoiding the friction would be dishonest. There is little liquidity in real estate. It’s not as simple as clicking a button to sell a house. If you sell too soon, the transaction costs alone—realtor commissions, closing costs, and front-loaded interest on a new mortgage—can subtly eat up years’ worth of appreciation. Financial advisors now generally agree that the time horizon is crucial. The historical odds shift significantly in your favor if you buy with the goal of holding for ten or more years. You’re probably giving up a significant portion of your gains to the process itself if you jump in and out every three to five years.
It’s worthwhile to sit with something else. According to a Gallup poll, 37% of Americans still believe that real estate is the best long-term investment, surpassing gold at 23% and stocks at just 16%. That is not a minority viewpoint. In contrast to a ticker symbol, it represents a deeply held intuition that property is real. You can’t live in a stock, according to Joel Berner, senior economist at Realtor.com.
While wages catch up, home prices might stagnate for a few years. Additionally, values may remain high for much longer than the skeptics anticipate due to supply constraints and demographic pressure. No one is aware. Even in a market that seems to be testing everyone’s nerves right now, it is evident that real estate, when entered carefully and held patiently, continues to be one of the more dependable ways to build wealth over time.
