Submitted by Dont____Panic t3_yocaon in dataisbeautiful
Dont____Panic OP t1_ivdjr8v wrote
Made in Excel.
Data Sources are for UNITED STATES ONLY
- Median US home prices: (https://dqydj.com/historical-home-prices/) including CPI adjusted
- US 30 year fixed average mortgage rate: (https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/MORTGAGE30US)
- CPI adjusted monthly payment is calculated from 80% LTV on median home using median 30 year fixed mortgage rate.
- Median US Income: (https://dqydj.com/household-income-by-year/) including CPI adjusted
- Affordability bar is simply 28% of median gross income
Conclusion: Data shows that housing prices have risen to historically high levels (even by CPI adjustment) but the "monthly cost" of these mortgages remained within a narrow band from 1995 until 2021 and historically high monthly payments (inflation adjusted) for a mortgages occurred during the 1980s, although rapidly increasing rates in 2022 has also spiked mortgage payments.
Affordability of mortgage payments was quite good on a "monthly payments" basis in the USA until a few months ago.
However increasing purchase prices require higher down payments. This significantly affects "affordability" of mortgages, even when monthly payments are within reach of median income earners.
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