What the Car Market Reveals About Real Estate
The Car Market Is a Mirror of the Economy
If you want to understand the health of the U.S. consumer, look at cars. With 285 million vehicles on the road and 87% of daily trips taken in personal vehicles, car ownership is one of the most visible ways to track household finances.
And right now, the signals are troubling.
Student loans: After nearly 5 years of suspended reporting, delinquencies are once again being reported to credit bureaus.
Credit cards: 90-day delinquencies have doubled since 2021.
Hidden inflation: Rising property taxes, higher insurance costs, and healthcare premiums are quietly eating away at disposable income.
This backdrop makes car payments even harder to manage — and for many households, cars have become the first sign of financial distress.
The Auto Loan Squeeze
$1,000+ monthly payments: 20% of new borrowers are at this level, compared to the $700/month benchmark financial experts recommend.
Repossession limbo: 706,000 cars have been repossessed this year — but experts say that’s only about 30% of what should have been. Lenders are stalling.
Aging cars, rising repairs: CarMax reports more buyers being pushed into older, higher-mileage vehicles, but repair and maintenance costs have soared over the last five years.
For many, cars now represent financial strain, not freedom.
What It Means for Real Estate
Housing and cars are the two most debt-driven purchases most Americans make. What happens in one market often foreshadows the other.
Affordability Crunch: Just as cars got more expensive than incomes justified in 2020–2023, California home prices have surged beyond reach for many buyers.
Delayed Defaults: Banks are avoiding repossessions in auto loans — and we see similar patterns in housing, with lenders offering modifications or forbearance to delay foreclosures.
Shift in Demand: Just as car buyers are moving down to older models, homebuyers may begin shifting toward smaller homes, less expensive neighborhoods, or fixer properties.
Takeaways for California Buyers & Sellers
For Buyers: Affordability matters more than ever. Be realistic about your long-term monthly costs — from insurance to maintenance.
For Sellers: Expect buyers to negotiate harder and focus more on value. Properties that balance lifestyle appeal with financial sense will move fastest.
For Investors: Stress in the car market suggests more distressed housing opportunities could emerge in the next 12–24 months.
The Bottom Line
The car market is a leading indicator: it shows us when households are stretched, when lenders are stalling, and when affordability is breaking down. For California real estate, these same pressures are already shaping demand and will continue to define the market.
If you’re thinking about buying or selling, now is the time to look past the headlines and study the real signals. Cars are just one of them — housing is next.
