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The average price of American homes, in real terms (inflation adjusted), is now the highest it's ever been — even higher than the peak of the housing bubble in 2006 before it crashed 60% and bottomed out in 2012.
https://www.npr.org/sections/money/...e-peak-of-the-2000s-housing-bubble-what-gives
Of course, you really need to be looking at mortgage rates to understand housing affordability: http://www.freddiemac.com/pmms/pmms30.html
July 2021 average 30-year mortgage rate: 2.87% (with 0.7 points)
2008 12-month average 30-year mortgage rate: 6.03% (with 0.6 points)
To put that in perspective, a $500,000 mortgage (excluding down payment) would require a $2,073 monthly payment today, but a $3,007 monthly payment at 2008's 6% mortgage rates.
In other words: Houses are still way cheaper, in actual out-of-pocket terms for average people, than they were in 2008.
https://www.npr.org/sections/money/...e-peak-of-the-2000s-housing-bubble-what-gives
Of course, you really need to be looking at mortgage rates to understand housing affordability: http://www.freddiemac.com/pmms/pmms30.html
July 2021 average 30-year mortgage rate: 2.87% (with 0.7 points)
2008 12-month average 30-year mortgage rate: 6.03% (with 0.6 points)
To put that in perspective, a $500,000 mortgage (excluding down payment) would require a $2,073 monthly payment today, but a $3,007 monthly payment at 2008's 6% mortgage rates.
In other words: Houses are still way cheaper, in actual out-of-pocket terms for average people, than they were in 2008.