Just a a different way to look at home pricing over time. Source:
There likely both skewed in the same direction, so the point of the chart is the same - change over time.Average pay, average house? Why not use median?
In the year 2020 in Denver the 'Average person " had to make $100,000 to afford housing. Now on 2025 it's $176,000 per year. So in 2025 you needed to have a $25k per year income to live here.Average pay, average house? Why not use median?
They don't mean the same thing.There likely both skewed in the same direction, so the point of the chart is the same - change over time.
I would guess the primary reason is that worker hours are only tracked on average. I have seen data sets for median household income, but not median hourly wages. Average hours is a standard data set from the BLS. It accounts for all private sector, including higher overtime pay, and is also used to calculate things like worker productivity. https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/CES0500000003
Obviously I did not do the chart but that is always the debate around here. I honestly don't see the concern if your just tracking data over time - not trying to equate some absolute value of a single variable, average or median. The relative change should be reasonably close.
How can the effects of tariffs that are a few weeks old, possibly be figured in any "long-term" projections?Yes. 2020 to 2024 was a very inflationary time.
Its getting fixed, now.
One of the Fed’s favorite indicators—the 5-year forward inflation rate—is sitting near multi-year lows at 2.3% for CPI, translating to approximately 2% for PCE, exactly at the Fed’s target. Despite political rhetoric around tariffs and inflation, the data tells a clear story: long-term inflation expectations are stable, providing the Fed room to ease without risking a resurgence in inflation.
https://resources.wisdomtree.com/we...ommentary&utm_term=read_now&sfmc_id=115640163
10 years ago I saw people taking out 30 year loans - for a 4000 SF box in the sun - you know, for DINKS n Dog - bcs cheap rates and labor made this possible. But now insurance, PM, utilities, fees, and taxes are coming home to roost - especially if it took two paychecks to pull it off … One HVAC system away from a train wreckI grew up in a 1200 sq ft house. My first house was 1000 sq ft. My current house is 1600 sq ft.
All of the new construction houses going up around here are 2500 to 3500+ sq ft, single family homes. These are all quite expensive homes. The construction companies are in it to make money, and there isn't as much money in the smaller homes. The city gives lip service to affordable housing, but continues to push forward these large house communities because of the higher tax base it creates.
A single family of 4 does not need a 2500-3500 sq ft home. It is a luxury that people want, so that's what is being built.
Comparing income to a home in the 1000 to 1500 sq ft range would show much more favorable ratios. The problem is that there aren't enough of the smaller homes to go around.
Top 1% earners materially skew the average earning numbers. I'm not sure if their housing materially affects the average home price, though.There likely both skewed in the same direction, so the point of the chart is the same - change over time.
I would guess the primary reason is that worker hours are only tracked on average. I have seen data sets for median household income, but not median hourly wages. Average hours is a standard data set from the BLS. It accounts for all private sector, including higher overtime pay, and is also used to calculate things like worker productivity. https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/CES0500000003
Obviously I did not do the chart but that is always the debate around here. I honestly don't see the concern if your just tracking data over time - not trying to equate some absolute value of a single variable, average or median. The relative change should be reasonably close.
in the very Rural, farming township where I live, the MINIMUM allowed size for construction is 1300 sqft. just large enough to rule out Trailers.I grew up in a 1200 sq ft house. My first house was 1000 sq ft. My current house is 1600 sq ft.
All of the new construction houses going up around here are 2500 to 3500+ sq ft, single family homes. These are all quite expensive homes. The construction companies are in it to make money, and there isn't as much money in the smaller homes. The city gives lip service to affordable housing, but continues to push forward these large house communities because of the higher tax base it creates.
A single family of 4 does not need a 2500-3500 sq ft home. It is a luxury that people want, so that's what is being built.
Comparing income to a home in the 1000 to 1500 sq ft range would show much more favorable ratios. The problem is that there aren't enough of the smaller homes to go around.
I grew up in a 1200 sq ft house. My first house was 1000 sq ft. My current house is 1600 sq ft.
All of the new construction houses going up around here are 2500 to 3500+ sq ft, single family homes. These are all quite expensive homes. The construction companies are in it to make money, and there isn't as much money in the smaller homes. The city gives lip service to affordable housing, but continues to push forward these large house communities because of the higher tax base it creates.
A single family of 4 does not need a 2500-3500 sq ft home. It is a luxury that people want, so that's what is being built.
Comparing income to a home in the 1000 to 1500 sq ft range would show much more favorable ratios. The problem is that there aren't enough of the smaller homes to go around.
Roommates are great when you are single, not for families. A single family home provides much more freedom and other benefits than the identical home in a condo or apartment format can't provide...noise concerns bring primary as well as owning more property, even if it's a postage stamp yard.Plus, you can always roommate with others if you want less space and share the cost.
Want a 1200 sqft home? There are plenty of condos and apartments to buy from.