Amethyst Marroquin
Amethyst Marroquin is a research analyst for the National Association of REALTORS®.








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If you grew up making mixtapes, renting movies at Blockbuster, and watching MTV back when they still played music, that generation is now one of the most influential forces in today’s housing market. According to the 2026 Home Buyers and Sellers Generational Trends Report, buyers ages 46 to 60 (or Gen X, ) made up 25% of recent home buyers and 23% of home sellers. That’s not a footnote; that’s a major share of the action. While Millennials get most of the headlines and Boomers get the stereotypes, Gen X continues to make big moves quietly and decisively.
Gen X buyers aren’t driven by a single motivation. Yes, 22% purchased simply to own a home, proving that stability still matters. Others were responding to lifestyle shifts: 11% wanted a larger home; 10% wanted to be closer to family and friends, and 9% bought due to a change in family situation. Life doesn’t get slower in midlife; it gets more complex.
That complexity shows clearly in housing choices. Nineteen percent of Gen X buyers purchased a multi generational home, the highest share of any generation. The leading reasons were adult children over 18 moving back home (36%) and taking care of aging parents (35%). It’s less “empty nest” and more “Family Ties.”
Financially, Gen X entered the market hungry like the wolf. Seventeen percent paid all cash, reflecting years of earning, building equity, saving, and surviving multiple economic cycles. Sixty percent of Gen X buyers are married couples, often benefiting from dual incomes. In fact, half of Gen X households have two income earners, while 10% have three or more, giving this group notable purchasing power.
That power is reflected in the numbers: In 2024, Gen X buyers had the second highest median household income at $125,000. With that income, buyers aged 46 to 60 purchased the second largest homes at a median of 1,900 square feet. More space supports home offices, returning children, aging parents, or simply breathing room after long workdays.
Often labeled the “middle child” generation, Gen X continues to bridge gaps—between generations, responsibilities, life stages, and East and West Berlin. Today’s housing market reflects that adaptability, practicality, and quiet confidence, proving once again that Gen X remains a driving force behind the doors they choose to open.
Amethyst Marroquin is a research analyst for the National Association of REALTORS®.
Amethyst Marroquin is a research analyst for the National Association of REALTORS®.