Market Data + Trends

Millions Priced Out by Soaring Mortgage Rates in 2022

As the Federal Reserve doubled down on its efforts to tame inflation, millions of households were priced out by higher mortgage rates in 2022
Jan. 10, 2023

From early 2022 to late October, the U.S. weekly 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose just above 3% to over 7% before leveling off at 6.42% at the end of the year. That sharp increase sent monthly mortgage payments from $1,925 on a median priced new home in early 2022 to $2,923 on the same house by the close of the year, a 51% increase, according to NAHB Eye on Housing.

As a result, only 20.3% of U.S. households could afford a median priced new home at October’s 7.08% rate, a share that will fall even further if more rate hikes are introduced in the year ahead.

When interest rates increased from 3.22% to 4.22% as of the middle of March 2022, the percent of households that can afford median-priced new homes decreased to 30.4% from 34.2%. The monthly mortgage payment, which includes principal and interest, but excludes taxes and insurance, for the same home increased from $2,165 from $1,925.

An increase from 4.22% to 5.22% as of early May 2022 priced additional 5 million households out of the market for the median-priced new homes.

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