A $1,000 increase in the cost of a median-priced newly-built home, pushes 127,560 prospective buyers out of the market, notes a survey.
These households would be able to qualify for a mortgage to purchase the home before the price increase, but not afterward, according to a recent study by the National Association of Home Builders.
The numbers are even more startling when looking at the impact of potential interest rate increases. Just a quarter-point rise in the rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage would price out around 1 million households.
“Even a relatively small increase in price or interest rates can dramatically impact housing affordability,” said Chairman Randy Noel, chairman of NAHB, and a custom home builder from LaPlace, La. “Housing affordability is a serious problem right now in communities across the country. Rising interest rates, regulatory barriers, higher building materials costs and labor shortages all add to the cost of a home and are preventing households from achieving the goal of homeownership.”
The number of priced out households varies across both states and metropolitan areas, largely affected by the sizes of local population and the affordability of new homes. The study examines priced out estimates for every state and more than 300 metropolitan areas.
Among all the states, Texas had the largest number of home buyers that would be priced of the market. The $1,000 price increase would push 11,152 households out of the market in Texas, followed by California, 9,897, and Ohio, 7,341.
The metropolitan area with the largest priced out effect, in terms of absolute numbers, is Chicago, Naperville Ind., and Elgin, Wisc., where 4,499 households are squeezed out of the market if prices increase by $1,000.