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New construction home in DFW with builder rate buydown signage in 2026

What Happens When Your Builder's Rate Buydown Ends? A 2026 DFW New Construction Guide

June 09, 2026

What Happens When Your Builder's Rate Buydown Ends? A 2026 DFW New Construction Guide

By Steven J. Thomas

New construction home in DFW with builder rate buydown signage in 2026

That low payment in the builder's brochure looks great. Then you read the fine print and see the words "2-1 buydown," and the question every smart DeSoto and DFW buyer should ask is this: what happens to my payment when the buydown ends? Builders across Dallas-Fort Worth are advertising rate buydowns as their headline incentive in 2026, and they work well when you understand them. The danger is buying a payment you can only afford for the first year or two. Let me walk you through exactly how these deals work so you buy with your eyes open.

Direct Answer

A builder's temporary buydown like a 2-1 lowers your interest rate for the first one or two years, then your payment jumps to the full note rate for the remaining 28 years. A permanent buydown lowers the rate for the whole loan. Before you sign, model the payment after the buydown expires and make sure you can afford it. Learn the full process in the free New Construction Home Guide.

Neighborhood Spotlights: Where DFW Buydowns Are Heaviest

Red Oak and Glenn Heights

These southern DFW communities are packed with new construction and active builder competition, which means generous incentives. You will see 2-1 and even 3-2-1 buydowns paired with flex cash here. The homes are attractive and the payments look easy in year one, but the same buydown that helps a Red Oak buyer can trap one who did not plan for the reset. Run the year-three number before you fall for the year-one number. If you want a clear breakdown of how these communities compare, start with the New Construction Home Guide.

Waxahachie and Midlothian

Further south, Waxahachie and Midlothian offer larger lots and strong builder incentives as developers push to move inventory in 2026. Buydowns here often come bundled with the requirement that you use the builder's preferred lender. That is not automatically bad, but it means the advertised deal is tied to one lender's terms, not the best terms on the open market. Always compare. Browse what is actually available across the metro on the DFW new construction hub.

Cedar Hill and Duncanville

Closer to DeSoto, new build pockets in Cedar Hill and Duncanville give move-up buyers a chance to stay near home while upgrading. Inventory is tighter, so incentives can be smaller, but a well-structured buydown still helps with the early years. The lesson is the same everywhere: know the full payment before you commit.

Pro Tip: Before you tour a single model home, download the free New Construction Home Guide so you can read every incentive offer like a pro.

Local Market Trends (Summer 2026)

  • DFW builders are offering $10,000 to $30,000 in flex cash toward closing costs or rate buydowns (market reporting, 2026).
  • Common structures include 2-1 and 3-2-1 temporary buydowns and permanent rate reductions through preferred lenders.
  • The 30-year fixed mortgage rate averaged 6.48 percent the week of June 4, 2026, down from 6.85 percent a year earlier (Freddie Mac PMMS).
  • Homes are taking longer to sell in northern suburbs like Frisco, Prosper, and McKinney, which is pushing builders to sweeten incentives.

Here is what this means for you. A 2-1 buydown on a 6.48 percent note starts you around 4.48 percent in year one and 5.48 percent in year two, then settles at 6.48 percent in year three and beyond. The savings are real and front-loaded, which helps when you are also buying furniture and settling in. The risk is treating the year-one payment as your forever payment. See the current Freddie Mac rate survey for the baseline and confirm builder details in writing.

"A buydown is a tool, not a gift. Used right, it bridges you into a home affordably. Used blind, it sets up a payment shock you did not plan for."

Cost Breakdown for New Construction Buyers

Look past the brochure number and budget for the real picture:

  • Down payment: typically 3.5 percent FHA or 5 percent conventional on these illustrations.
  • Property taxes: often excluded from builder marketing payments and significant in many DFW communities.
  • HOA and MUD or PID dues: common in newer communities and easy to overlook.
  • Design center upgrades: budget early, because they add up fast.
  • The post-buydown payment: the single most important number to model before you sign.

The return on understanding all of this is simple. You move into a home you can comfortably afford in year five, not just year one. That peace of mind is the whole point.

Builder and Community Insights: Know the Competition

Builders want their inventory homes sold by quarter-end, which is exactly why incentives spike on quick-move-in homes. Many buydown promos only apply to those inventory homes, not to-be-built or custom lots, and most require contracts written and closed by specific dates. Read those conditions carefully. The builder is competing against resale homes and other builders, and that competition is your leverage. Use it. You can also stack a buyer rebate on top of certain new construction purchases through the new construction rebate program.

Financing and Incentives That Attract Buyers

This is where I do something most agents cannot. Because I am dual-licensed as a broker and a loan officer at Envision Home Lenders, I can sit on both sides of the table and tell you whether the builder's preferred-lender deal actually beats the open market. Sometimes the buydown is genuinely strong. Sometimes the higher base price or lender fees quietly eat the savings. You deserve to know which one you are looking at.

The smart play is to get your own numbers first so you have a baseline to compare. When you get pre-approved independently, you walk into the model home knowing your real rate, your real payment, and whether the builder's offer is the deal it claims to be. That is how you negotiate from strength instead of hope.

Conclusion

Builder rate buydowns are one of the best tools in the 2026 DFW new construction market, but only when you understand them. A temporary buydown lowers your early payments and then resets to the full rate. A permanent one lowers it for good. Know which you are being offered, model the payment after the buydown ends, account for taxes and HOA dues the brochure left out, and compare the preferred lender against the open market. Do that and you buy a home that fits your budget for the long haul, not just the first year.

Ready to buy new construction the smart way? Start here:

You're Always Home with Steven J. Thomas.

Key Takeaways

  • A 2-1 buydown lowers your rate for two years, then resets to the full note rate for the rest of the loan.
  • Always model the post-buydown payment before you sign anything.
  • Builder marketing payments often leave out property taxes and HOA dues.
  • Most buydown promos require the builder's preferred lender and apply only to quick-move-in homes.
  • Get pre-approved independently so you can judge whether the builder's deal truly wins.

FAQ: Builder Rate Buydowns in DFW

How does a 2-1 buydown actually work?
Your interest rate is reduced by 2 percent in year one and 1 percent in year two, then returns to the full note rate in year three for the rest of the loan term. The builder funds the early savings up front.

Is a temporary buydown worth it financially?
It can be, because the savings are front-loaded when budgets are tightest. The key is making sure you can comfortably afford the full payment once the buydown expires.

What happens if I cannot afford the payment after the buydown ends?
That is the risk to avoid. You may need to refinance if rates drop, but rates are never guaranteed, so never buy assuming you can refinance later. Budget for the full payment from the start.

Do I have to use the builder's preferred lender?
Usually to get the advertised incentive, yes, but you can buy the home with your own lender. Always compare both before deciding, because the best advertised deal is not always the best total deal.

How long does it take to close on a new construction home in DFW?
Quick-move-in inventory homes can close in 30 to 60 days, while to-be-built homes can take several months to a year depending on the builder and the build stage.

Where can I find new construction homes in DFW?
Browse current new construction and resale inventory across the metro on the Lone Star Living App to compare communities, builders, and prices.

Equal Housing Opportunity. Mortgage and incentive details are based on current conditions at the time of writing and are not a guarantee of rate, price, or payment. Steven J. Thomas, Refind Realty DFW and Envision Home Lenders, 128 S. Cockrell Hill Rd, DeSoto, TX 75115. 972-846-9170.

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