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Home affordabil­ity watch: The 10 fastest-growing metro areas

- By HOLDEN LEWIS NerdWallet TX Tagline:Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistribu­ted.

Raise your hand if you know someone who recently moved to Atlanta, Dallas-Fort Worth or Houston. A lot of hands went up, because those are the three fastest-growing metropolit­an areas in the U.S. — and they have relatively affordable home prices.

NerdWallet calculated home affordabil­ity for the 10 metro areas that had the most population growth from mid-2016 to mid2017, the latest data available from the U.S. Census Bureau. Among them, Atlanta had the most affordable home prices this spring and Seattle had the least affordable.

Affordabil­ity was estimated by comparing each metro area’s median household income with the monthly principal-and-interest payment for a median-priced single-family home in the second quarter. After a 20 percent down payment, house payments were calculated at an interest rate of 4.71 percent, the average rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage in the second quarter in NerdWallet’s daily mortgage rates survey.

The three most affordable metros for buying a home have two things in common, says Danielle Hale, chief economist for Realtor.com: space to grow and local government­s that “are more willing to permit and allow developmen­t, too.”

The rankings were compiled using data from the National Associatio­n of Realtors, the Census Bureau and NerdWallet.

FASTEST-GROWING METRO AREAS BY HOUSING AFFORDABIL­ITY

1. ATLANTA-SANDY SPRINGS-ROSWELL, GEORGIA

Median home price: $228,800

Median household income: $62,613

Principal and interest payment: $950 (equivalent to 18.2 percent of median monthly income)

Population growth: 89,013

Atlanta had the lowest median house price among the 10 fastest-growing metro areas and the fifthhighe­st household income. The combinatio­n of wages and house prices put Atlanta at the top for house affordabil­ity.

2. HOUSTON-THE WOODLANDS-SUGAR LAND, TEXAS Median home price: $244,400 Median household income: $61,708

Principal and interest payment: $1,015 (19.7 percent of monthly income)

Population growth: 94,417

Houston’s affordabil­ity comes courtesy of having this list’s third-lowest house prices and sixth-highest household income.

3. DALLAS-FORT WORTHARLIN­GTON, TEXAS

Median home price: $268,200

Median household income: $63,812

Principal and interest payment: $1,114 (21 percent of monthly income)

Population growth: 146,238

The Metroplex had the fourth-highest income on the list and the fourth-lowest house prices, making it third most affordable. It was the fastest-growing metro.

4. WASHINGTON, D.C., METRO AREA Median home price: $443,100

Median household income: $95,843

Principal and interest payment: $1,841 (23 percent of monthly income)

Population growth: 65,908

The Washington-Arlington-Alexandria metro area sprawls across the District of Columbia and parts of Virginia, Maryland and West Virginia. Prices were second-highest among these 10 metros and incomes were highest.

5. AUSTIN-ROUND ROCK, TEXAS

Median home price: $330,200

Median household income: $71,000

Principal and interest payment: $1,372 (23.2 percent of monthly income)

Population growth: 55,269

The Texas capital had the fourth-highest house prices among the fastest-growing metro areas and third-highest household income.

6. TAMPA-ST. PETERSBURG-CLEARWATER, FLORIDA

Median home price: $238,700

Median household income: $51,115

Principal and interest payment: $992 (23.3 percent of monthly income)

Population growth: 54,874

Tampa-St. Pete had the second-lowest house prices on this list. But affordabil­ity took a hit because it had the lowest household income.

7. PHOENIX-MESASCOTTS­DALE, ARIZONA

Median home price: $272,000

Median household income: $58,075

Principal and interest payment: $1,130 (23.3 percent of monthly income)

Population growth: 88,772

Phoenix had the thirdlowes­t household income on this list, along with the fifth-highest home prices.

8. ORLANDO-KISSIMMEE-SANFORD, FLORIDA

Median home price: $269,000

Median household income: $52,385

Principal and interest payment: $1,117 (25.6 percent of monthly income)

Population growth: 56,498

This tourist magnet had the second-lowest incomes on this list, trailing only Tampa-St. Pete. But house prices were higher, striking a blow to affordabil­ity.

9. RIVERSIDE-SAN BERNARDINO-ONTARIO, CALIFORNIA Median home price: $360,000

Median household income: $58,236

Principal and interest payment: $1,495 (30.8 percent of monthly income) Population growth: 57,017 With the third-highest house prices among the top 10, but the fourth-lowest household income, many residents of the Inland Empire have to stretch to afford a home.

10. SEATTLE-TACOMABELL­EVUE, WASHINGTON

Median home price: $530,300

Median household income: $78,612

Principal and interest payment: $2,203 (33.6 percent of monthly income)

Population growth: 64,386

The Emerald City had the second-highest household income among the top 10 and the highest house prices. With a typical house costing more than half a million dollars, it’s difficult to afford a house payment even on Seattle’s relatively high incomes.

This article was provided to The Associated Press by the personal finance website NerdWallet.

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