
“A homebuyer must earn $114,627 to afford the median-priced U.S. home, up 15% from a year ago and more than 50% since the start of the pandemic… That’s the highest annual income necessary to afford a home on record” https://investors.redfin.com/news-events/press-releases/detail/987/redfin-reports-that-homebuyers-must-earn-115000-to-afford
“Buyers now need to earn 70% more than they did six years ago to buy a home… The national household income required to buy a median-priced home has jumped by nearly $47,000” https://www.realtor.com/news/trends/income-homebuying-inventory-report-april-2025/
“To afford the sky-high mortgage payment of $2,570, the typical buyer would have to earn at least $126,700 a year… only 6 million of the nation’s 46 million renters met that annual income threshold” https://www.realtor.com/news/trends/affordability-crisis-home-prices-record-household-income-housing-report-2025/
The gate sits at $114K while the median household brings in $80K. That’s not a stretch. That’s a cutoff. The climb isn’t steep. It’s vertical.
Mortgage payments demand $2,570 a month. Forty million renters are locked out before they even try. The market isn’t inviting buyers. It’s filtering them.
Income needed to buy has surged 70% since 2019. That’s not drift. That’s engineered separation. The system didn’t glitch. It recalibrated.
Policy response is flatline. No zoning reform. No wage indexing. No tax relief. Just recycled advice and stale optimism.
Builders lag. Sellers hold. Rates hover near 7%. Inventory stays tight. The squeeze isn’t temporary. It’s structural.
The six-figure barrier isn’t aspirational. It’s exclusionary. The dream didn’t fade. It was priced out.
This isn’t a housing market. It’s a sorting algorithm. And the sort is ruthless.