Short-Lived Mortgage Rate Relief Boosted Affordability To A 19-Month High in September

Staff Report From Georgia CEO

Wednesday, November 20th, 2024

A middle-income household would have been able to afford more homes on the market in September than in any month in more than a year and a half, a new Zillow® analysis shows. Mortgage rates fell to a two-year low in September, opening up more possibilities for home buyers. However, the sharp reversal in mortgage rates in the weeks since has likely pushed some prospective home buyers back to the sidelines.

Metros where the share of affordable listings increased the most since last year

Mortgage rates have been moving quickly over the past few months, which can make a big impact on what home shoppers can afford. In May, when mortgage rates averaged 7.06%,1 a household making the median U.S. income could have comfortably afforded 22.7% of homes listed for sale across the country.2 In September, with mortgage rates averaging 6.18%, that jumped to 27.7% of homes for sale — the highest share since February 2023.

"Affordability remains the top challenge for first-time home buyers especially, and buying power can change quickly with the unpredictable nature of mortgage rates," said Orphe Divounguy, a senior economist for Zillow Home Loans. "Buyers should expect more ups and downs ahead for mortgage rates. While there's no guarantee, signs point to rates moving a bit lower into next year. However, the path will be bumpy, and buyers should stay ready to move forward when the time is right for them."

Mortgage rates are proving to be extremely volatile, having risen to 6.78%, as of November 14, showing just how quickly a home can move into or out of a prospective home buyer's budget in today's market. Home shoppers can stay on top of volatile rates with Zillow Home Loans' BuyAbilitySM tool. It incorporates real-time mortgage rates to provide buyers with a personalized estimate of the home price and monthly payment that fits within their budget at any given moment. Now, home shoppers can use their BuyAbility estimate — rather than a price range — to shop for homes on Zillow that they can afford. If mortgage rates fall or a shopper's credit score improves, they will see more listings enter their BuyAbility range.

October market trends
In October, when mortgage rates averaged 6.43%, the share of listings affordable for a middle-income household was greater than a year earlier in all of the nation's 50 largest metro areas. In 12 markets, more than half of homes listed for sale in September were affordable, led by Pittsburgh (72.1%), St. Louis (64.2%), Buffalo (63.7%) and Detroit (61.5%).

Many markets with the greatest gains from last year in the share of listings affordable to a middle-income household are in the Sun Belt. Austin (+13.2 percentage points) has seen the biggest increase, followed by Raleigh (+12.4), San Antonio (+12.2), Phoenix (+12.1) and Minneapolis (+11.9).

Large markets in California, along with a handful in the Northeast, are among the least affordable in the U.S. Less than 15% of listings in October were affordable to a middle-income household in Los Angeles (1.6%), San Diego (4.2%), San Jose (7.2%), Sacramento (10.5%), the New York City metro area (11.4%), Boston (11.6%), Riverside (12.6%) and San Francisco (14%).

Metro Area*

Share of Affordable
Listings (October
2024)**

Share of Affordable
Listings (September
2024)**

Share of Affordable
Listings (May 2024)**

United States

27.2 %

27.7 %

22.7 %

New York, NY

11.4 %

11.6 %

10.5 %

Los Angeles, CA

1.6 %

1.9 %

1.5 %

Chicago, IL

43.2 %

42.3 %

35.8 %

Dallas, TX

28.1 %

28.9 %

20.4 %

Houston, TX

39.6 %

40.7 %

32.2 %

Washington, DC

44.3 %

44.5 %

36.4 %

Philadelphia, PA

51.2 %

51.7 %

44.6 %

Miami, FL

23.9 %

24.8 %

21.0 %

Atlanta, GA

46.0 %

47.4 %

37.9 %

Boston, MA

11.6 %

12.7 %

9.3 %

Phoenix, AZ

24.0 %

26.0 %

18.2 %

San Francisco, CA

14.0 %

15.3 %

10.7 %

Riverside, CA

12.6 %

13.2 %

9.7 %

Detroit, MI

61.5 %

60.7 %

56.5 %

Seattle, WA

17.1 %

16.7 %

12.7 %

Minneapolis, MN

50.6 %

51.0 %

40.9 %

San Diego, CA

4.2 %

4.3 %

2.7 %

Tampa, FL

26.5 %

27.4 %

21.3 %

Denver, CO

22.9 %

23.0 %

17.2 %

Baltimore, MD

56.2 %

56.2 %

50.2 %

St. Louis, MO

64.2 %

64.6 %

60.2 %

Orlando, FL

22.3 %

22.9 %

18.0 %

Charlotte, NC

33.0 %

33.9 %

26.4 %

San Antonio, TX

33.1 %

34.4 %

25.5 %

Portland, OR

18.5 %

19.5 %

15.2 %

Sacramento, CA

10.5 %

10.6 %

6.9 %

Pittsburgh, PA

72.1 %

73.1 %

64.4 %

Cincinnati, OH

53.5 %

53.3 %

44.9 %

Austin, TX

26.3 %

27.0 %

17.8 %

Las Vegas, NV

18.9 %

19.6 %

17.1 %

Kansas City, MO

51.2 %

50.6 %

43.6 %

Columbus, OH

45.4 %

45.4 %

37.3 %

Indianapolis, IN

59.5 %

60.1 %

49.3 %

Cleveland, OH

57.2 %

56.5 %

49.7 %

San Jose, CA

7.2 %

7.0 %

4.1 %

Nashville, TN

18.6 %

20.6 %

13.3 %

Virginia Beach, VA

43.9 %

45.3 %

36.9 %

Providence, RI

14.5 %

17.5 %

12.0 %

Jacksonville, FL

39.9 %

41.0 %

31.7 %

Milwaukee, WI

46.4 %

44.8 %

39.6 %

Oklahoma City, OK

42.7 %

42.5 %

32.7 %

Raleigh, NC

40.3 %

42.2 %

32.1 %

Memphis, TN

47.7 %

48.0 %

42.4 %

Richmond, VA

43.1 %

44.8 %

36.1 %

Louisville, KY

48.4 %

48.4 %

41.0 %

New Orleans, LA

36.9 %

38.5 %

30.4 %

Salt Lake City, UT

22.7 %

23.9 %

14.6 %

Hartford, CT

41.8 %

41.3 %

36.0 %

Buffalo, NY

63.7 %

64.8 %

55.7 %

Birmingham, AL

54.8 %

54.7 %

48.7 %

*Table ordered by market size
**Assuming a median-income household and 20% down paymentNexstar Logo