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Moving from Delaware to North Carolina:
Housing Cost Guide

How your housing costs change when you relocate. Based on 2026 data with 10% down, 6.5% rate, 30-year fixed.

Monthly Housing Cost Change
+$47/mo

Your housing costs will increase by approximately $47 per month ($564/year) when you move from Delaware to North Carolina.

Side-by-Side Comparison

DelawareNorth CarolinaChange
Median Home Price$355,000$340,000$-15,000
Property Tax Rate0.56%0.78%+0.22%
Monthly Tax (on median)$166$221+$55
Insurance/yr$1,300$2,300+$1,000
Closing Costs$12K$5K$-6,955
Transfer Tax4%0.2%-3.80%
Est. Monthly PITI$2,427/mo$2,474/mo+$47/mo

What Your Delaware Equity Buys in North Carolina

If you sell your median-priced Delaware home ($355K) and buy in North Carolina ($340K):

Equity from sale (est. 30% after typical ownership)$107K
Down payment on North Carolina home (20%)$68K
Remaining equity after down payment$39K

Your Delaware equity covers the 20% down payment on a median North Carolina home with $39K left over. That surplus can cover closing costs, moving expenses, or go into savings.

Monthly Budget Impact

Delaware PITI
$2,427/mo
North Carolina PITI
$2,474/mo
Monthly increase$47/mo
Annual increase$564/yr
10-year cost$6K

Over 10 years, this move costs you approximately $6K in housing costs alone.

Key Differences to Know

Your dollar stretches further in North Carolina. The median home costs 4% less than in Delaware, which translates to a $15K difference in purchase price. This means a smaller loan, a lower monthly payment, and less total interest paid over the life of your mortgage.

Insurance will cost you more in North Carolina — $2,300/year compared to $1,300/year in Delaware. That's an extra $1,000 annually ($83/month). Shop multiple carriers to find the best rate.

When you buy in North Carolina, expect about $5K in closing costs (1.4% of purchase price). This includes a 0.2% transfer tax. Budget for this amount on top of your down payment.

Down Payment Assistance in North Carolina

North Carolina's NC Home Advantage Mortgage offers Up to 5% DPA. If you haven't owned a home in three years (or are buying in North Carolina for the first time), you may qualify. Check eligibility requirements and income limits on North Carolina's housing finance agency website.

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