The affordability crisis continues to impact American households across the board, with 16 percent of listings affordable to the average household.

An article by Gabriella Cruz-Martinez in Yahoo Finance highlights how the housing crisis disproportionately impacts Black and Latino households. According to research from Redfin, “The average Black household could afford just 7% of listings for sale last year on a median income, while white households could afford 22% of listings. The share was nearly as bad for Latino households, which could afford just 10% of homes for sale.”
Across the country, only 16 percent of homes were affordable to the average homebuyer, ethnicity notwithstanding, a drop of 41 percent since 2022. In some of the most expensive markets like Anaheim, California, affordability rates are below 0.5 percent for Black and Latino households and 2 percent for white households. “At a national level, an average homebuyer in 2023 had to earn an annual income of at least $109,868 if they were aiming to spend under 30% of their income on a monthly mortgage payment for a median-priced home.”
The prognosis is less grim for 2024, as rent prices have started to decrease, but average rent costs remain above pre-pandemic levels. “According to Redfin, the increase in housing supply throughout 2024 and a burst of new construction could cause prices to drop by 1% on average by year-end.”
FULL STORY: Lack of affordable homes for sale hits minorities hardest, analysis shows

Montreal Mall to Become 6,000 Housing Units
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Planetizen Federal Action Tracker
A weekly monitor of how Trump’s orders and actions are impacting planners and planning in America.

DARTSpace Platform Streamlines Dallas TOD Application Process
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Chicago Judge Orders Thousands of Accessible Ped Signals
Only 3% of the city's crossing signals are currently accessible to blind pedestrians.

Philadelphia Swaps Car Lanes for Bikeways in Unanimous Vote
The project will transform one of the handful of streets responsible for 80% of the city’s major crashes.
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