Homebuyers must earn $75,849 annually to afford the typical U.S. starter home as of February, up 8.2 percent ($5,767) from a year earlier, according to a new report from Redfin.
The monthly housing payment for the typical U.S. starter home was $1,896 in February, also up 8.2 percent from a year earlier.
The income necessary to buy starter homes is increasing from a year ago due to rising prices and mortgage rates: The typical starter home sold for $240,000 in February, up 3.4 percent year over year, and the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate was 6.78 percent, up from 6.26 percent a year earlier.
Starter homes are roughly half as affordable as they were before the pandemic. Americans needed to earn $40,465 annually to afford the typical U.S. starter home in February 2020, when the median sale price was $169,000 and the average mortgage rate was about 3.5 percent.
“The pandemic housing-market boom changed the definition of a starter home,” said Redfin Senior Economist Elijah de la Campa in a release. “A decade ago, many people thought of a starter home as a small three-bedroom single-family house. Now that type of home could cost seven figures, especially in expensive parts of the country. The most affordable homes are much smaller and often require a lot of work to make them habitable—which makes them cost even more. Today’s most affordable homes are still hard for the average American to afford, let alone the average first-time buyer who tends to put less money down in exchange for higher monthly payments. Rising prices and mortgage rates are pushing buyers who earn more than the median income to buy starter homes, and often pushing buyers who earn less money out of the market.”
Incomes are rising, but at less than half the rate of starter-home costs. The typical American household earns an estimated $84,072, up 5.5 percent from February 2023 (versus the 8.2 percent increase in income needed to buy a starter home). That means the typical household can afford the $75,849 median-priced starter home, but they have less money left over after housing payments than they used to.
Today, the median household income is just 11 percent higher than the income needed to buy a starter home. One year ago, the median household income was 14 percent higher than the income required to buy a starter home, and four years ago, just before the pandemic began, the median income was 63 percent higher, according to Redfin.
Zooming out from starter homes to the overall market, a separate Redfin report found that a homebuyer must earn $114,000 to afford the typical U.S. home, roughly $30,000 more than the median U.S. household income.
In the past, it was often true that people earning less than the median income could afford starter homes in much of the country; starter homes were considered an affordable option for first-time buyers.
Today, someone earning 80 percent of the median income—$67,258—could not afford the typical U.S. starter home. Before the pandemic real estate boom, someone earning 80 percent of the median income—roughly $53,000 in early 2020—could afford the typical starter home, which required an annual income of just over $40,000.
Redfin cited another challenge for first-time buyers: They’re often competing with all-cash offers for limited inventory of starter homes. More than one-third (36.5 percent) of the nation’s starter homes were purchased in cash in February, near the highest level in a decade. It’s likely that many of those homes sold to real estate investors, who are turning them into rentals and thus removing them from the stock of for-sale starter homes. Others likely sold to repeat homebuyers using equity from a previous sale.
While the income required to buy a starter home is up from a year ago, it’s down 8 percent ($6,524) from last October’s all-time high of $82,373. That’s because mortgage rates have come down from their recent high. Mortgage rates are sitting around 6.8 percent, down from a two-decade high of 7.8 percent in October 2023. Affordability should continue improving throughout 2024 as mortgage rates gradually decline further.
There are also a few other encouraging signs for first-time buyers:
• There are more starter homes to choose from. Active listings of starter homes rose 7 percent annually in February, the biggest increase in at least a decade. (The caveat is that the number of starter homes on the market fell to a record low in February 2023, which is part of the reason for the big year-over-year uptick.)
• In some metros, first-time buyers are able to negotiate prices down or get concessions from sellers because high costs are pushing down homebuying demand.