Houston Chronicle

HOW MUCH HOUSE YOU CAN AFFORD DEPENDS ON WHERE YOU LIVE

- By Holden Lewis

Your ability to own a home is affected by where you live. Even people with modest incomes can afford homes in Decatur, Ill., the metropolit­an area with the nation’s most affordable houses. At the other end of the affordabil­ity spectrum is the San Jose, Calif., metro area, where high incomes are outmatched by stratosphe­ric home prices.

A home is most affordable when it doesn’t cost much more than a year’s pay. Decatur is an affordable market because the median house costs about one and a half times the median annual income. (“Median” is the midpoint, where half of the values or incomes are lower and half higher.) In comparison, there’s San Jose, where a typical household earns a six-figure income but a median single-family house costs about 12 times what a typical household earns.

Every quarter, NerdWallet calculates home affordabil­ity for 172 metropolit­an areas by comparing the median annual household income and the monthly principal-and-interest payment for a medianpric­ed single-family home. After accounting for a 20 percent down payment, the house payments were calculated at an interest rate of 4.45 percent, the average rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage in the first quarter; payments don’t include insurance, property taxes or homeowner associatio­n dues.

The comparison­s revealed the five most and least affordable markets for buying a home in January through March, or the first quarter of 2018. The rankings were compiled using data from the National Associatio­n of Realtors, the Census Bureau and NerdWallet surveys.

MOST AFFORDABLE METRO AREAS 1. DECATUR, ILL.

Median home price: $73,000 Median household income: $46,198 Principal and interest payment: $294 (equals 7.6 percent of median monthly income) In March, single-family homes for sale in Decatur had been on the market for a median of 119.5 days, according to Realtor.com. The national median for all home sales was 63 days.

2. CUMBERLAND, MD.-W.VA.

Median home price: $86,200 Median household income: $45,808 Principal and interest payment: $347 (9.1 percent of monthly income) Listed homes in Cumberland had been on the market a median of 136.75 days in March.

3. ELMIRA, N.Y.

Median home price: $100,800 Median household income: $51,269 Principal and interest payment: $406 (9.5 percent of monthly income) Homes in Elmira had been on the market for a median of 97.5 days in March, just over a month longer than the national median.

4. BINGHAMTON, N.Y.

Median home price: $103,000 Median household income: $51,360 Principal and interest payment: $415 (9.7 percent of monthly income) Homes for sale in Binghamton had been listed a median of 108.5 days in March.

5. PEORIA, ILL.

Median home price: $114,800 Median household income: $57,090 Principal and interest payment: $463 (9.7 percent of monthly income) Peoria was the quickest-selling market among the five mostafford­able, with homes listed a median of 77.25 days in March.

LEAST AFFORDABLE METRO AREAS 1. SAN JOSE-SUNNYVALES­ANTA CLARA, CALIF. Median home price: $1.37 million Median household income: $110,040 Principal and interest payment: $5,533 (60.3 percent of

median monthly income) Buyers have to act fast in the San Jose area, the center of Silicon Valley: For-sale homes spent a median 17 days on the market in March, according to Realtor.com.

2. HONOLULU, HAWAII

Median home price: $775,500 Median household income: $80,513 Principal and interest payment: $3,125 (46.6 percent of monthly income) Honolulu, a popular market for internatio­nal buyers, had a median days-on-market of 52 days in March, according to Realtor.com.

3. SAN FRANCISCOO­AKLAND-HAYWARD, CALIF.

Median home price: $917,000 Median household income: $96,677 Principal and interest payment: $3,695 (45.9 percent of monthly income) Just to the north of Silicon Valley, homes here sell almost as fast. In the San Francisco, Oakland and Hayward area, homes spent a median of just 22 days on the market in March, according to Realtor.com.

4. SAN DIEGO-CARLSBAD, CALIF.

Median home price: $610,000 Median household income: $70,824 Principal and interest payment: $2,458 (41.6 percent of monthly income) California has four of the five least-affordable metro areas. San Diego homes were listed a median 32.5 days in March, according to Realtor.com.

5. LOS ANGELES-LONG BEACH, CALIF.

Median home price: $545,500 Median household income: $65,950 Principal and interest payment: $2,198 (40 percent of monthly income) Homes for sale in the Los Angeles area had been on the market a median of 33.5 days in March, according to Realtor.com.

 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press ?? The San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, Calif., region is the least affordable metropolit­an area, according to NerdWallet, which says the area has a median home price of $1.37 million.
Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press The San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, Calif., region is the least affordable metropolit­an area, according to NerdWallet, which says the area has a median home price of $1.37 million.

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