The mortgage payment is the predictable part of homeownership. First-year owners get blindsided by the rest: appliance failures the inspector didn't catch, a water heater that picks the move-in week to die, a tree the previous owner deferred trimming for a decade. National surveys show 81% of homeowners say costs have run higher than expected and 46% couldn't accurately estimate repair costs before buying. The 1% rule (budget 1% of purchase price per year for maintenance) is the floor; older homes, larger lots, and high-cost-of-living areas push toward 2% to 4%. Setting up the emergency fund in month one is the highest-impact thing a new homeowner can do.
The 1% rule (and when it breaks)
- Baseline: 1% of home value per year, spread across routine maintenance, small repairs, and a sinking fund for major systems.
- 1.5% to 2%: typical for homes 10 to 30 years old.
- 2% to 4%: homes over 30 years old, or homes in harsh climates (coastal, freeze, wildfire, hurricane), or with deferred maintenance from previous owners.
- Alternative rule: $1 per square foot per year. Comparable to 1% on most homes.
- Doesn't include: renovations, upgrades, or aesthetic improvements (those are budget extras).
For a $400,000 home: budget $4,000 to $8,000 per year for maintenance and repairs, not counting renovations. Many years come in under; the year a roof or HVAC needs replacement comes in way over. The fund averages out.
Routine first-year costs (predictable)
- HVAC service: $100 to $250 per visit, ideally one in spring (AC) and one in fall (furnace). Yearly total $200 to $500.
- Gutter cleaning: $150 to $400 per cleaning. Twice yearly typical.
- Chimney inspection / sweep: $150 to $400 if you have a working fireplace.
- Lawn care / landscaping: $1,200 to $3,600 yearly, depending on lot size and DIY vs. service.
- Pest control: $40 to $80 per quarterly visit if on a plan. $200 to $400 yearly.
- HVAC filters: $30 to $100 yearly.
- Smoke and CO alarm batteries: $20 to $50 yearly.
- Septic pumping (if applicable): $300 to $700, every 3 to 5 years. Budget about $100 yearly.
- Well water testing (if applicable): $20 to $200 depending on tests run. Yearly.
- Property taxes: 0.5% to 2.5% of home value yearly, varies wildly by state.
- Homeowners insurance: $1,200 to $3,000 yearly typical, higher in disaster-prone areas.
- HOA fees (if applicable): $200 to $700+ monthly in some communities.
Routine maintenance subtotal for a typical 2,000 sq ft home: $1,500 to $3,000 in year one.
One-time first-year setup costs
- Tools and basics: drill, ladder, basic toolkit, garden hose, lawn mower or service. $300 to $1,500 if starting from scratch.
- Window treatments: $200 to $5,000+ depending on home size and quality.
- Re-keying locks: $50 to $300 for a locksmith. Worth doing immediately after closing.
- Furnishings for any new spaces: varies wildly. Many new owners spend $5,000 to $20,000 across the first year.
- Smart home / security setup: $200 to $2,000 (Ring doorbell, smart thermostat, etc.).
- Garage door opener key fobs: $30 to $80.
- Moving truck or movers: $300 to $5,000+.
- Utility setup fees: $100 to $500 across electric, gas, water, internet.
Likely-but-unscheduled first-year surprises
- Water heater failure: $1,000 to $2,500 replacement. Most fail at 8 to 12 years. If yours is in that range at closing, plan for it.
- HVAC repair (not replacement): $300 to $1,500. Aging units often need a capacitor, fan motor, or refrigerant within a year of changing hands.
- Plumbing repair: leak under a sink, garbage disposal failure, toilet replacement. $200 to $1,500.
- Tree work: a limb falls in a storm, or a tree close to the house needs trimming for insurance. $300 to $3,000.
- Roof spot repair: a small leak, a flashing repair after a storm. $300 to $1,500. Full roof replacement: $8,000 to $30,000.
- Appliance replacement: something you assumed was "fine" at the inspection fails within a year. Washer, dryer, fridge, dishwasher. $500 to $3,000 each.
- Pest issue: a one-time treatment for ants, mice, wasps, or termites. $200 to $1,500.
- Garage door opener or spring: $200 to $600.
- Sewer line or septic surprise: root intrusion, slow drains, full system inspection. $500 to $5,000+.
- Foundation crack or settling: usually monitoring; sometimes $500 to $5,000 in repairs.
The pattern: most first-year owners hit at least 2 to 3 unexpected items in the $300 to $2,000 range. A single $3,000 to $7,500 HVAC or water heater event is common in older homes.
What the inspection didn't catch
- Aging appliances that "work" but are at end of life.
- Old water heater anode rod (see water heater leaking from bottom).
- Slow drains hinting at a partial sewer clog.
- HVAC ducts that haven't been cleaned in 20 years.
- Worn weatherstripping and old caulk.
- Roof age the inspector noted but didn't fail.
- Tree roots threatening the sewer line.
- Outdoor faucets without freeze protection (see outdoor faucet check).
- Cosmetic paint touched up to hide moisture stains.
Building the emergency fund in month one
- Target $3,000 to $5,000 immediately accessible in cash or savings, separate from operating money.
- That covers the single most likely emergency: water heater, HVAC repair, or appliance failure.
- For older homes, target $5,000 to $10,000 to cover a half-roof or major HVAC event.
- Contribute monthly: 1% of home value divided by 12 = monthly target. For a $400,000 home, that's about $333 a month.
- Keep it separate from other savings so it doesn't get spent on a kitchen upgrade.
What's worth the money in year one
- HVAC tune-up: catches small issues, often gets the unit re-leveled and rebalanced after a move-in.
- Anode rod check on water heater 5+ years old: can add 5+ years to the tank's life.
- Gutter cleaning and roof inspection: catches winter problems before the first storm.
- Re-key: previous owners, contractors, and house sitters had keys you don't know about.
- Outdoor faucet shutoffs before first freeze.
- Smoke and CO alarm replacement if any are over 10 years old.
- Whole-house surge protector if you live in a lightning-prone area: $200 to $400 installed.
What can wait
- Kitchen renovation (live in it for a year before deciding).
- Landscape redesign (one full growing season tells you what you have).
- New appliances when current ones work.
- Cosmetic painting in low-priority rooms.
- Smart-home upgrades beyond a thermostat and a doorbell.
Common first-year mistakes
- Skipping the emergency fund because the down payment drained savings.
- Renovating the kitchen before living through one winter.
- Deferring HVAC service to save $200, then paying $1,500 for an emergency call in January.
- Ignoring the water heater age until water is in the basement.
- Not reading the inspection report carefully and missing the items flagged for follow-up.
- Buying tools as needed instead of a starter kit upfront (you'll spend more in trips to the hardware store).
- Underinsuring or not reviewing the policy until a claim.
Good maintenance rhythm
- Month 1: set up emergency fund ($3,000 to $5,000), re-key locks, review insurance.
- Month 1 to 3: walk every inch of the house with the inspection report in hand; address flagged items.
- Quarterly: HVAC filter, gutter check, smoke/CO alarm test.
- Spring and fall: HVAC service, gutter cleaning, exterior walk.
- Yearly: budget review — track actual spend vs. 1% rule and adjust.
- Yearly: water heater inspection if 5+ years old; roof inspection.
- Ongoing: monthly contribution to the maintenance fund; don't skip even when nothing's broken.
See also things first-year homeowners wish they had known and the 1% maintenance budget rule.
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