New Realtor.com Study Using Pearl Data Shows New Homes Save Buyers $25,000 Over 10 Years
June 26th, 2026 12:30 PM
By: Newsworthy Staff
A new study by Realtor.com, powered by Pearl's home performance data, reveals that buyers of newly built homes save an average of $25,335 over the first decade due to lower operating costs and fewer repairs.

A new study by Realtor.com, powered by Pearl SCORE data, quantifies how a home's performance affects its total cost of ownership, revealing that buyers of newly built homes save an average of $25,335 over the first 10 years compared to buyers of 20-year-old homes. The savings are driven primarily by fewer surprise repairs, better safety and comfort, and lower operating costs over time, according to the study published at Realtor.com.
Pearl, an independent standards and ratings organization, announced that its Pearl SCORE data has powered this research, which also introduces an interactive total cost-of-ownership experience on new construction listings. This feature provides personalized 10-year savings estimates comparing newly built homes to comparable resale properties, giving buyers greater insight into future utility, maintenance, and replacement costs before making a purchase decision.
“All homeowners want to know what a home will actually cost to live in,” said Robin LeBaron, Pearl’s President of Standards and Policy. “Pearl built the dataset that makes that possible, and we’re glad Realtor.com is the first major portal to put it in front of consumers.”
The analysis found that the financial benefits of new construction vary significantly by geography, climate, and local building standards. New England states led the nation in long-term savings, with Massachusetts ranking highest at nearly $39,000 in estimated savings over 10 years due to stricter building codes and greater energy efficiency demands in colder climates. The research also identified 16 metropolitan areas where the estimated long-term savings from buying a newly built home fully offset the upfront price premium compared to an existing home. Markets such as San Diego, Salt Lake City, and San Antonio demonstrated that lower operating and maintenance costs can substantially improve the long-term economics of homeownership.
“Our team has built the industry’s richest home performance dataset,” said Tim Stanislaus, Senior Vice President of Business Development at Pearl. “We’re thrilled to have Realtor.com introduce Pearl to US homebuyers. Today’s new-construction tool is one of many ways our data helps buyers understand how home performance matters.”
The analysis draws on Pearl SCORE, which rates every U.S. single-family home across five performance pillars: Safety, Comfort, Operations, Resilience, and Energy. Those ratings are available free to consumers at pearlscore.com. Pearl’s ratings draw on utility costs, climate data, maintenance projections, homeowner input, and home performance benchmarks to give homebuyers a more comprehensive view of what a home is actually like to live in.
Source Statement
This news article relied primarily on a press release disributed by Keycrew.co. You can read the source press release here,
