Should You Buy a Home During Residency?

The 7 Holiday Questions to Discuss with Family

Updated: November 2025 • 4 Minute Read

TLDR: High-Yield Summary

  • If you’ll be in your residency city for at least 3 years, buying a home can be a smart financial move.

  • Physician mortgages make homeownership accessible, often with little or no down payment—even if you have student loans.

  • The holiday season is the perfect time to talk with your family about housing plans, expectations, and possible support before Match Day.

  • Getting clear on your goals now will set you up for a smoother, less stressful home search after the Match.

1. How long will you realistically be in your residency city?

This is the foundation of the buy-versus-rent decision.

  • 3-year programs (IM, Peds, Anesthesia, EM): Owning can easily become financially competitive.

  • 5–7-year programs (Surgery, Ortho, ENT, Neurosurgery): Buying is often even more advantageous.

  • 1-year transitional or prelim programs: Renting tends to be the safer choice.

Most residents break even around 2.5–3 years, depending on their market — making residency length one of the strongest predictors of whether buying makes sense.

We’ll cover this more deeply in our upcoming post: Buying vs Renting During Residency: The True Break-Even Point.

2. How does your specialty influence your financial and lifestyle needs?

Your specialty impacts:

  • Work-life rhythm

  • Sleep patterns

  • Commute preferences

  • Roommate feasibility

  • Likelihood of moonlighting income

  • Desired level of stability

For some specialties, like surgery or OB/GYN, stability at home can be critical to managing unpredictable hours. For others, flexibility may feel more important.

Thinking through how your specialty shapes your lifestyle helps you decide whether homeownership supports — or complicates — your residency experience.

3. What role might your family play — financially or emotionally — in your housing plan?

The holidays are a natural time to talk openly about expectations and support.

Consider asking:

  • Would your family consider assisting with gift funds toward closing costs if needed?

  • Are they comfortable with you buying a home if it strengthens your financial stability?

  • Do they want you to avoid the potential chaos of annual moves?

  • Would they be excited to visit a more permanent home base?

  • Do they value you building equity instead of paying rent for 3–7 years?

Physician mortgage programs don’t require family involvement, but aligning expectations early can reduce uncertainty later.

Want help thinking through your top Match cities? Ask Steth for a quick overview, or connect with a specialist for personalized guidance. Most of our lenders can help in all 50 states.

4. What are the rent-versus-buy dynamics in your likely Match cities?

By now, you likely have 3–4 potential Match cities.

During the holidays, do some quick comparisons:

  • Average rent for 1–2 bedroom units

  • Starter home prices

  • Differences in taxes and HOA fees

  • Neighborhoods near hospitals

  • Parking considerations

  • Commute distances

  • General safety and convenience

In many residency markets — Midwest, Southeast, and some smaller coastal cities — buying is surprisingly attainable. In others, renting may make more sense.

We’ll break this down soon in: How to Compare Residency Cities Financially.

5. What type of living environment best supports your well-being during residency?

This is one of the most important — and most overlooked — questions.

Ask yourself:

  • Do you need quiet space to study?

  • Will frequent moves disrupt your sleep or workflow?

  • Do you prefer a stable home base during long training?

  • Are you planning to live with a partner, spouse, or pet?

  • Is commuting more stressful than staying closer to the hospital?

  • Would renting feel chaotic or unpredictable?

Residency is demanding. Home should be a stabilizing factor — not another stress point.

6. How do your student loans factor into the decision?

A common misconception among students: “My student loans will keep me from qualifying for a mortgage.” With physician mortgage programs, this is not necessarily true.

Many lenders allow:

  • Qualification based on IBR, PAYE, REPAYE payments, or full deferment with no payment.

  • Approval with only an employment contract or offer letter

  • Little or no down payment

  • No PMI, which reduces monthly costs

This design exists specifically to support residents and physicians early in their careers.

We’ll detail this in the upcoming article: Why Your $300K in Student Loans Won’t Kill Your Mortgage Dreams.

7. What’s your timeline between now and Match Day — and what should you prepare for now?

Understanding the residency housing timeline is powerful:

  • Nov–Dec: Interviews and early planning

  • January: Narrowing to 3–4 cities

  • Feb–early March: Financial prep + document gathering

  • Mid-March: Match Day → Start home search

  • March–April: Pre-approval, touring homes, making offers

  • April–May: Under contract + underwriting

  • June: Moving and beginning residency

Talking through this timeline with family helps you enter Match season prepared, confident, and less stressed.

Internal Article References (Upcoming Posts)

These related guides will be available soon:

  • Buying vs Renting During Residency: The True Break-Even Point
  • How to Compare Residency Cities Financially

  • Why Your $300K in Student Loans Won’t Kill Your Mortgage Dreams

  • Your Residency Shortlist: How to Prepare a Home Buying Strategy for All Possible Match Cities

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