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HomeImportant TopicsAffordable HousingThe $300,000 starter home is going extinct

The $300,000 starter home is going extinct

And this is true here in Arcata, too.

As you read the article below you’ll have to adjust the prices to what’s going on in Arcata. The overall message is the same whether it’s here in Arcata on in San Antonio.

Ownership opportunities have become a part of the past.

The figure of $300,000 is shown as a house that is “attainable” for a couple or small family, based on earnings and ability to pay the mortgage and expenses. And a house at $300,000 or below just is not available anymore.

Here is a curious vicious circle:  People wanted to buy houses. Builders are trying to build homes quickly to meet demand, and that sends prices up, from shortages of labor and materials. When mortgage rates were at historic lows, the demand increased as more people were able to buy homes, pushing costs and overall home prices up. And now, with even greater shortages and high mortgage rates, owning a house has become unattainable.

The answer? Smaller units. Higher densities — apartment buildings, that is. And if there cannot be condominiums (see: The Housing Market Needs More Condos. Why Are So Few Being Built?), then this equates to renting and not owning. Ownership opportunities have become a part of the past.


The $300,000 starter home is going extinct

This article originally appeared on Fortune.com as a story by Alena Botros.

Fast-forward to the present day and mortgage rates are up and prices still are, too, so what does that mean for housing affordability?

 

It means bad, bad things.

Let’s rewind back to the Pandemic Housing Boom, what now feels like a short-lived period of low mortgage rates and a dwindling age of remote work that combined to fuel housing demand. That pushed housing prices up—on a national level, up a whopping 41% during the Pandemic Housing Boom. Fast-forward to the present day and mortgage rates are up and prices still are, too, so what does that mean for housing affordability? It means bad, bad things.

Housing data and consultancy firm Zonda tracks the entire building lifecycle, beginning with what’s happening with raw land, into how that land is developed, and then what the homes sell for. This includes new home projects across the country and the percentage of those projects under $300,000. In comparing data from February 2019 and Feburary 2023, Zonda found that the share of projects under $300,000 declining all across the country.

The share of projects under $300,000 are nonexistent, coming in at 0%.

From Texas to California to Colorado to Ohio, they are vanishing everywhere. San Antonio, for instance, experienced a 12% decline in the share of projects under $300,000 from February 2019 to the same month this year, while Houston experienced a 16% decline and Cincinnati experienced a 29% decline. Still, all three markets were on the higher end (with current shares of homes under $300,000 at 34%, 28%, and 22%, respectively). The share of projects under $300,000 are nonexistent, coming in at 0% for the markets of Riverside and San Bernardino (grouped together as one), Denver, and Sacramento, down from 3%, 4%, and 2%, respectively in 2019.

As of 2021, the real median household income in the U.S. was $70,784, according to the Census Bureau, while the average home value in the U.S. was $297,030 by the end of 2021, according to Zillow—that’s more than four times the average household income. With the share of projects under $300,000 declining, so is affordability, simply put. Ali Wolf, Zonda’s chief economist, is alarmed at what this means. “We’re creating, inadvertently, a renter society not because of choice but because of force,” Wolf told Fortune.

Wolf, who shot to stardom during the Pandemic Housing Boom as a go-to expert on the exploding market, appearing several times on Bloomberg’s Odd Lots podcast, as well as PBS NewsHour, among many others, said that homes costing under $300,000 are essentially “attainable housing,” and almost everyone “should be able to afford a home under $300,000, that is within the realm of what’s reasonable.” Wolf said the question of why they’re disappearing has a “complicated answer,” related to factors including the cost of building materials, land availability, the cost of labor, the lack of housing supply, regulation, and zoning.

“To get a lower-priced home built under $300,000, you’ll either have to build a smaller home or homes in a higher-density setting.”

“To get a lower-priced home built under $300,000, you’ll either have to build a smaller home or homes in a higher-density setting,” Wolf said. “And oftentimes there’s resistance to that kind of change, either from city officials or from the NIMBY-ism movement,” she said, referring to every market’s not-in-my-backyard contingent that typically opposes new development in their neighborhood because, they say, it will either bring property valuations down or affect their quality of life, or both.

But that’s not all: “A lot of it comes down to the Pandemic Housing Boom,” Wolf told Fortune, as builders are trying to build homes quickly to meet demand, and that sends prices up. With mortgage rates at historic lows, the demand pool increased as more people were able to buy homes, pushing costs and overall home prices up.

“So it was really kind of this cascading effect that started with affordability,” Wolf said, because that increased the buyer pool, increased the need for building, and increased the cost of what goes into building, ultimately pushing home prices up.

At this point, the data is telling us that “we need to get serious about changing how homes are built,” Wolf said, which could mean increased density and smaller homes. That being said, because of the surge in demand, Wolf says, we’ve almost lost sight of how many people are not going to become homeowners because of how high home prices have gotten. That’ll create a “larger imbalance between the haves and have-nots in the economy.” Wolf said.

“It’s a wake-up call that we need to be doing something differently.”

And it’s not going to get better any time soon. In the next couple of years, Wolf said she expects the share of attainably priced homes will continue to go down in most, if not all, markets across the country.

“It’s a wake-up call,” Wolf told Fortune. “It’s a wake-up call that we need to be doing something differently.”