{"id":377,"date":"2025-06-20T12:00:11","date_gmt":"2025-06-20T12:00:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/kevinhollenbeck.com\/?p=377"},"modified":"2025-06-24T10:04:55","modified_gmt":"2025-06-24T10:04:55","slug":"colorado-tops-country-when-it-comes-to-this-key-cost-for-homebuyers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/kevinhollenbeck.com\/index.php\/2025\/06\/20\/colorado-tops-country-when-it-comes-to-this-key-cost-for-homebuyers\/","title":{"rendered":"Colorado tops country when it comes to this key cost for homebuyers"},"content":{"rendered":"
NEW ORLEANS \u2014 If owning a home wasn\u2019t already burdensome enough, Colorado has registered the biggest increase of any state when it comes to how much extra owners must set aside to cover insurance and property taxes.<\/p>\n
Lenders typically require borrowers to forward money for those expenses each month, which they hold in \u201cescrow\u201d to cover future payments. Those escrow payments are rising at a much faster rate than core mortgage payments, and those increases hit existing homeowners, not just new buyers, hard.<\/p>\n
Nationally, homeowners faced a 17% increase in the average escrow payment last year compared to this year, according to a study from Cotality, a real estate research firm formerly known as Core Logic.<\/p>\n
Colorado led the country with a 31% increase. Other states with high increases include Louisiana at 28%, Wyoming at 26%, and Montana and Alabama at 24%.<\/p>\n
\u201cIn markets like Colorado, for example, it is the top market, it\u2019s not just insurance, but it\u2019s taxes as well,\u201d said Selma Hepp, chief economist with Cotality, who was speaking at the National Association of Real Estate Editors in New Orleans.<\/p>\n
Colorado experienced widespread and dramatic increases in residential property values between mid-2020 and mid-2022<\/a>, which resulted in nation-leading property tax increases that forced political leaders to try and soften the blow.<\/p>\n While the increases in the assessment cycle that followed have been much tamer,<\/a> the higher costs are now baked in. Incomes, while rising, haven\u2019t gone up enough to compensate.<\/p>\n