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    The rule used to be buy a home priced at 3 times your income. Is that possible in NC?

    2 days ago

    For years, real estate agents followed a simple rule: a house should cost about two and a half times your annual income.

    But across the nation and especially in the Triangle, that guidance is no longer close to matching reality. Still-rising house prices (and home insurance premiums) are crushing many would-be homeowners’ dreams.

    In Raleigh, the median home price is now $441,461, up 55.8% in just five years, while the median income is only $75,424. This creates a price-to-income ratio of 5.8—more than double what’s traditionally considered affordable.

    Durham is in a similar situation with a ratio of 5.2, and Cary, though better at 4.7, still reflects the nation’s growing affordability crisis.

    Across North Carolina, the median home price is $382,900, while incomes haven’t kept pace, leading to a statewide ratio of 5.07. In cities like Asheville, where the ratio is 7.2, the crisis is even more pronounced.

    Rising home prices and lagging incomes are pushing many first-time buyers to townhouses, condos, or homes in smaller bedroom towns like Zebulon, Knightdale, and Pittsboro.

    With incomes increasing only modestly and housing costs continuing to soar, how do you think this affordability gap will affect homeownership in the long term?


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    Rusty
    3d ago
    The stated numbers in this article for median income and median home prices may be accurate, I agree 100% that home prices have sky rocketed since about 2019-2020. I had my house evaluated a couple years ago and the realtor says it’s worth $120,000 more than what we paid for it in 2012. Let’s not forget that a 30 yr fixed loan rate has also gone up from around 3% to 8%. Also, my homeowners insurance has increased by about $200 a year. Still… I pass by new home construction and new subdivisions in every direction leaving my driveway. Every home being built is on less than a half acre and priced from $350,00-500,000 (vinyl sided homes too I will add, not brick). Yet, people are buying them like crazy! Of course, each freshly poured concrete driveway also has a pair of $100,000 SUVs parked out front. I guess these folks didn’t see what happened in 2008. Piece of free advice for the millennials, just wait a few more years and there will be more foreclosure signs than election signs!
    CRAZY Cali fr. NC
    3d ago
    Walmart is everywhere in America. Find a place that's dirt cheap and work at Walmart. McDonald's is also everywhere. If they pay you $20 an hour to flip a burger and the houses are only 80 to 175,000 dollars, you're going to be okay. Do a side business like Uber. I would do Fletcher, King, or Seagrove North Carolina. There you go.
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