Live Rate Quotes
Real Estate Chart of the Day
Mortgage rates and markets change constantly. Stay 100% current by taking The Mortgage Reports by email each day. Click here to get free email alerts, or subscribe to the RSS feed in your browser.
Look around. Home prices are still low (all things relative) and mortgage rates are ridiculous. It’s no surprise that home affordability is high right now.
It wasn't supposed to be like this. Housing was supposed to have recovered and mortgage rates were supposed to have risen. But they haven't. And it's creating an opening for today's buyers.
According to the Home Opportunity Index, a quarterly report joint published by the National Association of Home Builders and Wells Fargo, more than 72 percent of all new and existing homes sold between January-March 2010 were affordable to families earning the national median income.
It’s the second highest reading in the survey’s history.
Bay City, Michigan topped the 2010 First Quarter affordability list. 98.7% of homes sold there were affordable for families earning the area’s median income. The rest of the Most Affordable are similarly "small towns".
For bigger-city living, Indianapolis clocked in at the top. 95% of all homes sold in Indianapolis are affordable to the city's median income earners.
Other noteworthy rankings include:
13. Dayton, Ohio 34. Peoria, IL 45. Cincinnati, OH 75. Madison, WI 200. Miami, FL
At the bottom of the affordability list is the New York-White Plains, NY-Wayne, NJ region. Just 20.9% of homes are affordable to families earning the local median income.
The affordability rankings of all 225 metro areas are available on the NAHB website. See where your town ranks and remember -- even if your city is near the bottom of the list, relative, affordability is very, very high.
Homes are affordable because of the unique state of the economy right now. In other words, it won't likely last.
Home values are recovering in many markets and mortgage rates can’t stay this low forever. It's unnatural. All things equal, buying a home may never come this cheap again.
If you were planning to buy later this year, consider moving up your timeframe. And to get an idea of what mortgage payments would look like for a home in your area,and we can get started from there.
Dan Green (NMLS #227607) is an active loan officer with Waterstone Mortgage. Email Dan ator call 513-443-2020.
Bonus: Click to get a free, no-obligation rate quote. I love to work with my readers!
Since you have reached the end of this post, you may be interested in checking out the related posts below.