Housing affordability in California improved slightly during the first quarter of this year, according to data released May 9.
Seventeen percent of the state’s households could afford a median-price home – $814,280 – during the first three months of 2024, a 15 percent increase compared with the last quarter of 2023 but a 20 percent decline year-over-year, the California Association of Realtors reported.
That estimate assumes an annual income of at least $208,400, enough to make $5,210 monthly payments. It takes into account principal, interest and taxes and is based on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at a 6.86 percent interest.
The month-over-month increase was attributed to a slight drop in mortgage rates, which led to a decline in home prices.
Twenty-four percent of the state’s home buyers were able to purchase the $655,000 median-priced condominium or townhome. That required yearly earnings of at least $167,600 to make a monthly payments of $4,190.
In the Inland Empire, 21 percent of all households could afford a median-priced home – $579,540 – during the first quarter, down one percent from the fourth quarter of 2023 and down three percent year-over-year.