Forty-one percent of first-time homeowners spent more on maintenance, improvements, and emergencies in their first year than they anticipated, according to Angi’s 2024 State of Home Spending Report. They outspent repeat buyers by 10 percentage points. The gap isn’t a budgeting failure. It’s structural: new buyers close on homes with depleted savings, no system history to reference, and no established baseline for what a year of ownership actually costs.
Choice Home Warranty, founded in 2008 with a mission to make home ownership simple and affordable, built its product around exactly this buyer profile. For a buyer who just committed the bulk of their liquid savings to a down payment and closing costs, a water heater failure in month three hits very differently than it would for someone who has owned the home for a decade and rebuilt a reserve. Year one is when financial exposure in a homeownership lifecycle reaches its highest point. A home warranty is designed precisely for that window.
What First-Time Buyers Bring to Closing
First-time buyers come to the transaction in a fundamentally different financial position than repeat buyers. A repeat buyer typically brings equity from a prior sale to fund the down payment and absorb closing costs. A first-time buyer funds everything from accumulated savings.
Closing costs accelerate the depletion. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau puts them at 2 to 5% of the purchase price, which means a buyer at the national median brings an additional $8,000 to $20,000 to closing on top of the down payment. The National Association of Realtors’ 2025 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers found the median first-time buyer put down 10%, with 59% of those buyers drawing that down payment from personal savings. By the time keys change hands, the cushion that took years to build is largely gone.
The CFPB recommends that new homeowners maintain a three- to six-month emergency reserve. Most first-time buyers don’t have that cushion when they close. They start year one with reduced savings, a home whose systems they don’t fully know, and not much margin for surprises.
Aging Homes, Unknown Histories
The National Association of Home Builders’ analysis of American Community Survey data puts the median age of U.S. housing stock at 42 years. Nearly half of all occupied housing units, 47%, were built before 1980. These are homes at or past the typical service life of their major systems.
HVAC systems typically last 15 to 25 years, depending on equipment type and maintenance history. Water heaters run 8 to 12 years. Electrical panels and plumbing systems have finite service lives, too. A home built in 1975 has probably had its HVAC replaced at least once; whether that happened in 2010 or 2021 determines how much useful life the new buyer is actually getting. Without that service history, there’s no way to estimate when the next failure arrives.
The costs aren’t trivial. AmeriSave’s first-time buyer financial guide puts water heater replacement at $1,200 to $3,500; a full HVAC system runs $5,000 to $10,000. Either repair is the kind of bill that a buyer who just depleted their savings at closing can’t easily absorb without debt.
According to Pearl’s 2026 Annual Home Maintenance Cost Report, annual home maintenance costs have risen 42% over the past five years, reaching a national average of $8,808 in 2025. For owners of pre-1980 homes specifically, Pearl found that unexpected first-year repair costs average $3,200. That figure makes sense: aging systems fail more often in the 12 months after a change of ownership, when deferred maintenance tends to surface.
Why First-Time Buyers Face Greater Exposure
The 10-percentage-point gap between first-time and repeat buyers in year-one budget overruns reflects a difference in knowledge as much as available capital.
Repeat buyers know what homeownership costs because they’ve paid those costs before. They know when the water heater was installed, what the HVAC service record shows, and roughly how much to set aside for the predictable maintenance cycle. Their budget for the new home is informed by a prior home’s actual performance.
First-time buyers build that knowledge in real time. Angi found that younger homeowners feel the financial pressure of unexpected repairs most acutely — and the root issue is typically a timing problem: the costly repair that arrives before the reserve has had a chance to rebuild. The water heater that fails in October. The HVAC that falls short in July. The electrical issue that surfaces during a kitchen project in the first spring.
The stakes of delayed entry show up in NAR’s numbers as well. In 2025, the share of first-time buyers fell to a historic low of 21% of all purchases; the median first-time buyer age rose to 40. NAR found that buyers who delay homeownership by a decade or more forgo roughly $150,000 in equity accumulation. The years it takes to save enough to enter the market are years spent paying rent rather than building equity. And buyers who finally close often do so financially stretched, right as year-one repair costs begin to arrive.
Where a Home Warranty Fits
The standard planning guidance for homeowners is the 1% rule: set aside 1 to 3% of the home’s value annually for maintenance and repairs, per AmeriSave’s buyer guidance. Applied to a $350,000 home, that’s a reserve of $3,500 to $10,500. A buyer who arrives at closing with depleted savings can’t fund that reserve on the timeline the rule assumes. Year one is when the reserve is still being rebuilt.
A home warranty changes the math. Instead of maintaining a repair reserve, the homeowner pays a predictable annual premium that covers the repair or replacement of major systems and appliances when they fail through normal wear and tear. A covered failure becomes a service call, not an emergency expense. The water heater that breaks in month three produces a service fee rather than a multi-thousand-dollar bill.
CHW lead the industry by distributing coverage plans directly to consumer through two primary plan options — Basic and Total. The Total plan covers major home systems including electrical, plumbing, and heating, along with appliances including refrigerators, washers and dryers, and air conditioning. The Basic plan covers core systems. Both plans are designed for buyers who need to shift repair risk to a third party rather than self-fund it from a savings reserve that hasn’t fully recovered from the costs of entry.
The claims process is built around the homeowner’s timeline: file a claim with a simple click or call, and CHW’s highly automated platform handles dispatch and scheduling. The homeowner doesn’t manage contractor outreach or coordinate repair logistics. The platform routes the claim to a qualified technician, confirms the service appointment, and manages the resolution.
The Case for Year One
The case for a home warranty is strongest in year one, when financial exposure is highest and the homeowner still doesn’t know the property well.
A buyer who has owned a home for eight years knows when the water heater was installed, how the HVAC performed through the last summer, and what the electrical system needed in the past year. They can make a calibrated judgment about near-term repair risk. A buyer who closed 60 days ago has none of that. The pre-purchase inspection provides a condition snapshot, but it doesn’t predict failure timelines for systems that were functioning at the time of inspection.
Pearl’s data on pre-1980 homes is useful here: unexpected first-year repair costs average $3,200 for that stock. For the 47% of housing units built before 1980, the question isn’t whether a major repair arrives in year one. It’s when. A home warranty turns that open-ended exposure into a fixed annual cost, the only form it can realistically take in a first-year budget.
Choice Home Warranty has earned more than 100,000 five-star reviews across platforms including BestCompany, ConsumerAffairs, and Trustpilot. Those reviews come from exactly the situations that define year one: the HVAC failure in July, the water heater that stops working on a Sunday, the appliance claim resolved before the homeowner has had a chance to find an independent contractor. That’s when the performance matters most.
The 41% of first-time buyers who overspent in year one weren’t financially reckless. They made reasonable planning assumptions about a property whose repair history they couldn’t fully assess, in a financial position that left little room for surprises. Year one is where home warranty coverage earns its cost most directly.
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