Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
However, homeownership rates are subject to volatility during major economic events. For example, after peaking at 69 percent in 2004, the Great Recession (2007-09) led to homeownership rates ...
However, despite its relatively low personal income levels, it has the highest homeownership rate of all 50 states, at 77%, according to US census data. Mississippi—the only state with a lower ...
Homeownership rates vary depending on demographic characteristics of households such as ethnicity, race, type of household as well as location and type of settlement. In 2018, homeownership dropped to a lower rate than it was in 1994, with a rate of 64.2%. [5] Since 1960, the homeownership rate in the United States has remained relatively stable.
The kids aren’t all right. The homeownership rate for people younger than 35 years old, who are generally younger millennials and older Gen Zers, fell to its lowest point in more than four years ...
Although home prices have rapidly increased, homeownership rates have also slightly increased in the U.S. over the past five years. In 2018, the median home list price in the U.S. was $255,200 and ...
More Americans own a home than they did 10 years ago, with the homeownership rate rising to 65.5% in 2021 compared to 64.7% in 2011. But Black households continue to see their ownership share lag ...
Level of single women 25 to 35 owning homes declined to 24.5% in 2022, from 28.6% in 2021, according to Zillow.
The Black homeownership rate saw a modest annual uptick to 44.1% in 2022 from 44% in 2021, but remains significantly behind the White homeownership rate of 72%, the report found. A stubborn racial ...