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Housing affordability is the worst it’s been in decades. It will improve in 2024, but by only a ‘small step,’ Realtor.com chief economist says

Sydney Lake
By
Sydney Lake
Sydney Lake
Associate Editor
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Sydney Lake
By
Sydney Lake
Sydney Lake
Associate Editor
Down Arrow Button Icon
November 30, 2023, 6:12 PM ET
Mortgage rates are expected to drop next year.
Mortgage rates are expected to drop next year.Getty Images

Mortgage rates are expected to drop next year, but not enough to make sky-high housing costs more affordable for potential homebuyers looking to break into the market, according to Realtor.com. 

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“We do expect affordability to improve going into 2024. That’s a cornerstone of our housing market forecast,” Realtor.com chief economist Danielle Hale tells Coins2Day. “But it’s going to be a pretty small step in that direction.” 

One of the positives for affordability is that Realtor.com forecasts the 30-year fixed mortgage rate will drop to an average 6.8% in 2024, more than a percentage point lower than the 8% peak this fall. The rate currently stands at 7.15%, according to Mortgage News Daily, but that’s still almost three-quarters of a point higher than a year ago. 

“This means that affordability is still worse than one year ago, but we expect to see this trend change,” Hale says. 

In other market data, a shortage of homes for sale is easing slightly. The number of newly listed homes in November grew 7.5% from a year earlier, the first gain in 17 months and another sign that the frozen housing market could be starting to thaw, according to another new report from Realtor.com on Thursday.

While more listings are a “welcome gift for buyers” for now, according to Realtor.com, “they will have to pay dearly for them.” Median homes now cost $420,000, just 1% higher than the same time last year, Realtor.com data shows. But higher mortgage rates have increased the monthly cost of financing a home by 7.9%, or roughly $172 more per month compared with November 2022, according to Realtor.com.

That’s the biggest increase in monthly home costs since Realtor.com started tracking this data in 2016, Hale said in a statement. Today, homebuyers must make about $118,000 to “comfortably” afford their housing payments, according to Realtor.com, Hale said in a statement. 

2024 housing market forecast

Overall, Realtor.com forecasts that while mortgage rates will average 6.8% in 2024, they’ll edge down to 6.5% by the end of next year. Meanwhile, home prices will drop 1.7%, it said, in contrast to what has been mostly annual gains since 2012. 

Despite the current market turbulence, home prices are actually up 6.2% year-over-year as of September 2023, Case-Shiller said this week. Case-Shiller is among the leading housing market forecasting tools, but its numbers lag a couple months. 

However, Craig J. Lazzara, managing director at S&P Dow Jones Indices, expects home prices to continue rising, but he didn’t predict what housing prices would do next year specifically. 

“Although this year’s increase in mortgage rates has surely suppressed the quantity of homes sold, the relative shortage of inventory for sale has been a solid support for prices,” he said in a statement. 

While Realtor.com expects housing affordability to improve slightly in 2024, the problematic lock-in effect is likely to persist, Hale says. Homeowners who locked-in their mortgages at sub-3% rates a couple of years ago have little to no motivation to sell now because they would end up buying homes with far higher monthly payments at current 7%-plus mortgage rates. A small decline to 6.8% is an improvement, but it may not move the needle enough to prompt current homeowners to finally sell.

“In the big picture, this is still higher for longer [rates],” Hale says, adding,: “We also think this means that the impact of higher mortgage rates, including the lock-in effect, are likely to continue to be a factor.”

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About the Author
Sydney Lake
By Sydney LakeAssociate Editor
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Sydney Lake is an associate editor at Coins2Day, where she writes and edits news for the publication's global news desk.

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