Will the Real Estate Market Crash in 2026?
Podcast: 3D Media Life Podcast
Host: Dmitry Hanuka (3D Media)
Guest: Audie Gardner
Guest Title: Branch Manager, West Coast Capital Lending
Topics: Housing market predictions, mortgage rates, affordability crisis, loan strategies, market crash debate
Introduction
In this episode, Demetri sits down with Audie Gardner, a seasoned mortgage expert, to answer one of the biggest questions on everyone’s mind:
Will the real estate market crash in 2026?
They break down affordability, interest rates, loan strategies, and what’s really happening behind the scenes in today’s housing market. If you’re thinking about buying, waiting, or refinancing, this conversation gives a clear, grounded perspective without hype.
The Real Problem: Housing Is Becoming Unaffordable
One of the clearest takeaways from this episode is simple:
Housing is becoming increasingly unaffordable for the average person.
In markets like Irvine:
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Average household income: ~$130K–$150K
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Average home price: ~$1.8M
To afford that home:
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Required income: $250K–$400K+ depending on debt
That creates a massive gap.
Even in the best-case scenario, buyers are short by $50K–$100K in income, and in many cases, it’s far worse.
This affordability crisis is the main reason:
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Buyers are waiting
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Transactions are down
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The market feels “stuck”
Why the Market Feels Frozen
Right now, the housing market isn’t crashing. It’s stagnating.
Here’s why:
1. Low Inventory
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Homeowners are locked into 2–3% rates
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Selling means taking on higher rates + higher taxes
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Many simply choose not to move
2. Low Demand
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Buyers can’t afford current prices
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High monthly payments limit qualification
3. Psychological Gridlock
People are asking:
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“Should I wait?”
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“Will prices drop?”
Result:
Fewer buyers + fewer sellers = frozen market
Mortgage Rates: What’s Actually Happening
There’s a big misconception:
People think when the Fed cuts rates → mortgage rates drop immediately.
That’s not how it works.
Mortgage rates are tied more closely to:
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The 10-year Treasury
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Investor demand for mortgage-backed securities
Right now:
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Rates are in the high 5% to low 6% range
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This is closer to historical averages
The key insight:
Even if rates drop, they may not drop dramatically like before because:
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The government is reducing its role as a buyer
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Private investors demand higher returns
Will Rates Drop in 2026?
The expectation:
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Potential for 4 rate cuts in 2026
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Each cut: ~0.25% to 0.5%
But there’s uncertainty:
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Inflation
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Global events
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Market sentiment
Even experts admit:
This is not predictable with precision.
The Big Debate: Will the Market Crash?
Audie’s View:
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No major crash unless there’s serious economic hardship
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Foreclosures are extremely low (~0.25%)
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Lenders now prefer loan modifications over foreclosures
Demetri’s View:
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A correction is likely
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Overleveraged buyers + job loss could trigger a chain reaction
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Prices may drop if supply suddenly increases
Reality:
There are three possible outcomes:
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Prices go up
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Prices correct (dip)
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Market stays flat
No one knows which will happen.
Why a 2008-Style Crash Is Less Likely
The system today is very different from 2008:
Back then:
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No income verification
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Zero down payments
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Speculative buying
Today:
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Stricter lending standards
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Required down payments
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More regulated products
Also:
Banks now actively work to avoid foreclosure.
Instead, they:
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Modify loans
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Extend terms
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Move missed payments to the back
This keeps people in homes and stabilizes the market.
Loan Options Buyers Should Understand
Most buyers don’t realize how many financing options exist.
1. Conventional Loan (30-year fixed)
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~6% interest
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Standard approach
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Stable payments
2. Bank Statement Loans
Best for:
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Business owners
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Self-employed buyers
Instead of tax returns:
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Income is based on deposits
Trade-offs:
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Higher rates
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Requires reserves
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Requires down payment
3. Interest-Only Loans
Lower monthly payment upfront:
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Example: $7,000 vs $8,500
But:
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No equity built during interest-only period
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Higher long-term cost
Best for:
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High-income individuals
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People with large bonus structures
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Investors using cash flow strategically
The Rise of 50-Year Mortgages
A controversial idea gaining traction:
50-year fixed mortgages
Pros:
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Lower monthly payments
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Increased affordability
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Easier entry for first-time buyers
Cons:
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Much higher total interest
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Longer debt cycle
Key insight:
Most people don’t keep loans long-term anyway.
Average mortgage lifespan:
~4 years
So affordability today may matter more than total lifetime cost.
Buy Now or Wait?
One of the most practical parts of the episode:
If you’re buying to live in the home:
Timing the market is less important than affordability.
Key logic:
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You need a place to live
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Rent keeps rising
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Waiting often costs more long-term
As stated in the episode:
“If you can afford it, buy it and weather the storm.”
Renting vs Owning: The Hidden Tradeoffs
Renting
Pros:
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Flexibility
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Lower upfront cost
Cons:
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No equity
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Rent increases
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At the mercy of landlord
Owning
Pros:
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Stability
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Tax benefits
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Potential appreciation
Cons:
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Higher monthly cost
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Maintenance
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Less flexibility
One key insight:
Even if the market dips, rent can still go up due to demand.
AI and the Future of Lending
AI is already transforming the mortgage industry.
Examples from the episode:
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AI handling client communication
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Automatic language translation
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Pre-qualification processes
What’s next:
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Fewer loan officers
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Faster approvals
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More automation
But for now:
Human trust still matters in major financial decisions.
Key Takeaways
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Housing affordability is the biggest issue today
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The market is frozen, not crashing
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Mortgage rates are stabilizing but uncertain
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A crash is possible, but not guaranteed
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Lending is safer today than in 2008
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Buyers should focus on affordability, not timing
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New loan products can unlock opportunities
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AI will reshape the mortgage industry
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Owning still provides long-term stability