flexiblefullpage - default
Currently Reading

How Has Local Affordability Changed Over Time?

Advertisement
billboard - default

How Has Local Affordability Changed Over Time?


August 12, 2019
downtown houston
Photo: Vlad Busuioc

John Burns Real Estate Consulting looked at how current housing affordability in the top U.S. housing market compares to the prices of the past.

We all know that New York is more expensive than Texas and that relocating home buyers can get more for their money in the South. However, for local housing industry executives, what matters is how expensive each market is in comparison to its own history. Our Burns Affordability Index™ (a 10-point scale where 0 is the most affordable time in a market’s history and 10 is the least affordable time) measures the ratio of total housing costs (mortgage payment, property taxes, etc.) to incomes over time in each market. By this measure, Houston and Denver appear more out of line than other markets.

Of course, affordability is a draw to Houston and Denver if you are coming from very expensive markets like California, but the value gap between California and these markets has narrowed recently. Only time will tell if this gap has narrowed permanently.

Read more
 

Advertisement
leaderboard2 - default

Related Stories

Innovation

IKEA Model Home Aims to Ease the Trauma of Homelessness

Blending innovation with empathy and eco-conscious design, IKEA US unveils a pioneering model home in its Live Oak, Texas, store

Affordability

How Much Income Do First-Time Buyers Need to Afford the Average Home?

The median-priced home is unaffordable in 44 of the 50 largest U.S. metro areas

Affordability

What Is the Relationship Between Urban vs. Suburban Development and Affordability?

A new paper from Harvard's Joint Center looks at whether expanding the supply of suburban housing could, in turn, help make dense urban areas more affordable

Advertisement
boombox1 -
Advertisement
native1 - default
halfpage2 -

More in Category

Delaware-based Schell Brothers, our 2023 Builder of the Year, brings a refreshing approach to delivering homes and measuring success with an overriding mission of happiness

NAHB Chairman's Message: In a challenging business environment for home builders, and with higher housing costs for families, the National Association of Home Builders is working to help home builders better meet the nation's housing needs

Sure there are challenges, but overall, Pro Builder's annual Housing Forecast Survey finds home builders are optimistic about the coming year

Advertisement
native2 - default
Advertisement
halfpage1 -

Create an account

By creating an account, you agree to Pro Builder's terms of service and privacy policy.


Daily Feed Newsletter

Get Pro Builder in your inbox

Each day, Pro Builder's editors assemble the latest breaking industry news, hottest trends, and most relevant research, delivered to your inbox.

Save the stories you care about

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet lorem ipsum dolor sit amet lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.

The bookmark icon allows you to save any story to your account to read it later
Tap it once to save, and tap it again to unsave

It looks like you’re using an ad-blocker!

Pro Builder is an advertisting supported site and we noticed you have ad-blocking enabled in your browser. There are two ways you can keep reading:

Disable your ad-blocker
Disable now
Subscribe to Pro Builder
Subscribe
Already a member? Sign in
Become a Member

Subscribe to Pro Builder for unlimited access

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.