By Laura Onyeneho | Houston Defender

This post was originally published on Defender Network

An aerial view of homes
Many Gen Z buyers are already purchasing homes with parents or siblings, a trend that has grown rapidly in recent years.ย Credit:ย Breno Assis/Unsplash

(WIB) – Youโ€™ve been saving.ย 

Youโ€™ve been budgeting. 

Youโ€™ve cut back on brunch, skipped the vacation, and maybe even moved back in with your parents for a year. But every time you check Zillow, the houses you can afford are further out, smaller, or in neighborhoods you donโ€™t want to live in. And the ones you actually want? Theyโ€™re expensive.

So homebuyers are pooling money with friends, siblings, and people they trust to buy property together. 

Welcome to the era of co-buying, where homeownership is less about waiting for โ€œthe oneโ€ and more about refusing to wait at all.

If this sounds familiar, youโ€™re not alone.ย The Kinder Institute for Urban Research at Rice Universityย released the 2025 State of Housing in Harris County and Houston research, which examines a range of issues influencing housing affordability and the residential options available to locals.

Canโ€™t Afford a Home Alone? Buy One With A Friend

It shows that families with a median income can only buy homes close to $195,000, while the median property price in Harris County has increased to almost $325,000. For many families, homeownership is becoming increasingly unaffordable due to this stark affordability gap.

Co-buying is the practice of purchasing property with friends, siblings, or other non-romantic partners. According to a recent study by JW Surety Bonds, nearly 15% of Americans have co-purchased a home with someone other than a romantic partner, and another 48% would consider it.

Society historically viewed homeownership as a post-marriage goal. Co-buying breaks this norm, making it acceptable to enter the market with a โ€œplatonicโ€ or โ€œromantic-but-unmarriedโ€ partner.

Buyers typically choose between joint tenancy with automatic rights of survivorship (also called Tenancy in Common) and equal shares with automatic rights of survivorship, which means buyers can have unequal shares, with each party able to sell or pass on their share.

โ€œYounger people are absolutely being shut out of home buying due to unaffordability and inaccessibility. The ability to co-purchase property is one way that millennials have the ability to access homeownership
and investing.โ€

Ayesha Shelton, co-founder of Park Street Homes

โ€œYounger people are absolutely being shut out of home buying due to unaffordability and inaccessibility,โ€ says Ayesha Shelton, co-founder of Park Street Homes in Houston. โ€œThe ability to co-purchase property is one way that millennials have the ability to access homeownership and investing.โ€

Gen-Z and Millennials are leading a surge in co-buying, with roughly 32% of Gen Z and 18% of Millennials considering purchasing homes with friends, family, or partners to combat high interest rates and low affordability.

The Benefits, and the Risks

Shared down payments, split monthly costs, and earlier market entry are just a few of the benefits. Houstonโ€™s abundance of duplexes makes the city particularly well-suited for co-buying. 

โ€œI think itโ€™s an amazing idea for two people to come together and buy a duplex together.โ€ The piece thatโ€™s most easily overlooked is we are in agreement at this time,โ€ Shelton says. โ€œItโ€™s important to evaluate what your steps will be if there ever comes a time when you all are not in agreement.โ€

Kristina Modares, a co-buying strategist at Joynt who has co-purchased property 10 times, sees it as a natural evolution. โ€œThis is just like another thing thatโ€™s being introduced to them thatโ€™s maybe not so crazy as it may have been to their parents,โ€ she says.

Legal agreements are essential. Modares recounts helping a woman who bought with her boyfriend, only to have him unexpectedly end the relationship and demand that they sell. โ€œShe was like, I wish I had known my options,โ€ Modares says.

Operating agreements should spell out ownership percentages, exit strategies, and what happens if someone wants out early. Shelton recommends involving an attorney from the start because โ€œIf you donโ€™t, then it can get pretty messy.โ€

While some see co-buying as a temporary workaround for high rates, Modares believes itโ€™s a long-term solution. โ€œAs things get more expensive, this is still going to be a really popular idea,โ€ she says. โ€œIt all depends on how the market moves.โ€

Modares offers homebuyers straightforward advice: 

-Vet partners carefully

-Have difficult money conversations early

-Put everything in writing.