You may be asking yourself, "Is now a good time to buy?" It's a very important question. As a buyer, you're concerned with getting the best deal possible. Will you be buying at the top of the market? Or will you purchase when the market is in favor of you, the buyer?
According to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and their Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index (HOI), affordability is high for the 5th consecutive quarter.
How is affordability calculated? In general terms, if housing costs don't exceed 30 percent of the monthly household income, then it meets the standards. Anything more than 35 percent is too high.
"Today’s report is very encouraging because it indicates that homeownership continues its more than year-long trend of remaining within reach of more households than it has for almost two decades," said NAHB Chairman Bob Jones, a home builder from Bloomfield Hills, Mich. "With interest rates still hovering at low levels, companies starting to hire new employees and the economy beginning to rebound, this should encourage more home buyers to enter the market and help further stabilize housing and the economy."
The HOI indicates that 72.2 percent of all new and existing homes sold in the first quarter of this year were affordable to families earning the national median income of $63,800.
Some of the best markets for affordability is:
Syracuse, New York
Dayton, Ohio
Grand Rapids-Wyoming, Michigan
Indianapolis, Indiana
Youngstown, Ohio, and
Bay City, Michigan
Of course, affordability, like most aspects of the housing market, is a local issue. The local economy has a direct effect on home prices, market favor (buyers or sellers), and the like.
Take for example, New York-White Plains-Wayne, New York-New Jersey. The NAHB says this region continued to lead the nation in poor affordability. Less than 21 percent of all homes sold in the 1st quarter 2010 were affordable.
Other markets where affordability is low:
San Francisco, California
Honolulu, Hawaii
Santa Ana-Anaheim-Irvine, California, and
Los Angeles-Long Beach-Redwood City, California