Homeownership Hits Highest Level Since 2008 Driven by Younger, First-Time Buyers

Homeownership Hits Highest Level Since 2008 Driven by Younger, First-Time Buyers

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Updated on October 7th, 2020

Homeownership rates surged to 67.9% in the second quarter, the highest rate since 2008. The 3.8 percentage point increase from 64.1% a year earlier is the largest annual increase in homeownership rates on record. A word of caution about the data: The Census changed its methodology this quarter, eliminating all in person interviews due to the pandemic, which may have distorted the data and contributed to such a large jump in homeownership rates. That said, there are a number of intertwined pandemic-related trends that have likely led to the strong growth in homeownership:

Younger households and first-time buyers drove the homeownership gains

The homeownership rate climbed the most among 35-44 year olds (up 4.9 percentage points to 64.3%) and people under 35 (up 4.2 percentage points to 40.6%). Demographically, we anticipated the homeownership rate would grow in 2020 and beyond because a huge wave of millennials are entering their prime homebuying years. The pandemic may have moved up this timeline in the short-run. Many renters who had perhaps been planning a purchase in the next few years, have opted to go ahead and buy now given historically low rates. Thus the current growth will likely not continue to climb as much in future quarters. These low rates hit at a time when apartment living is at its least desirable. People confined to their homes aren’t able to take advantage of communal building amenities or the neighborhood retail and restaurants that make renting in an urban area appealing. 

 

The pandemic and remote work are changing how and where we want to live 

As we spend more time at home, home is more important than ever and Redfin agents report that buyers are rethinking their priorities. 

“Spending so much time at home during quarantine has made a lot of people realize that it might be time to stop renting a cramped apartment in the city and time to start owning their first single-family home,” said Pam Henderson, a Redfin agent in Dallas. “With mortgage rates at record lows and remote work on the rise, some renters are having an epiphany: They could buy a lower-priced home in the suburbs for close to what they’re paying in rent.” 

Many people expect to continue working remotely at least some of the time even after the pandemic ends. As a result, buyers who were tied to renting in an expensive area near their workplace, now have the flexibility to buy a home in a more affordable suburb or even in another city entirely. Redfin’s migration data found that a record 27.4% of Redfin.com users looked to move to another metro area in the second quarter of 2020. That’s up from 25.2% in the second quarter of 2019. 

The rent-versus-buy equation has shifted in the short-term

Additionally, the math has shifted in the favor of buying. A half-point drop in mortgage rates can decrease a homebuyers’ monthly payment substantially, making a mortgage more attractive than a lease. Meanwhile, rents are sticky in the short term. Because renters are locked into a lease, rents don’t fluctuate like a stock price and adjust more gradually. 

This is a short-term shift. In the long run, as renters opt to buy there is less demand for rental units, which will pull rents down. At the same time, the increased demand for real estate will push up home prices. So we’ll see the rent vs. buy equation rebalance over time. 

Renters moved in with family

The number of rental households fell by 7.2% in the second quarter. During the first wave of the pandemic, many people moved out of rental units into owner-occupied homes–often with parents or other family– either due to job loss or to leave densely populated areas like New York City during the height of the stay-at-home orders. While these moves have not created new homeowners per se, this phenomenon does contribute to the homeownership rate increasing because someone previously living in a rental unit is now counted as living in an owner-occupied unit. However, this effect was outweighed by strong growth in new household formation, which rose by 4% in June—the highest annual growth rate since the record began in 1955.

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Taylor Marr

Taylor Marr is the deputy chief economist on the research team at Redfin. He is passionate about housing and urban policy and an advocate for increased mobility and affordability. He laid the framework for our migration data and reports and diligently tracks the housing market and economy. Before Redfin, Taylor built financial market index funds for Vanguard at the University of Chicago. Taylor went to graduate school for international economics in Berlin, where he focused on behavioral causes of the global housing bubble and subsequent policy responses. Taylor’s research has been featured in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and The Economist. He was also recently the President of the Seattle Economics Council and collaborates frequently with the Fed, HUD, and the Census Bureau. Follow him on Twitter @tayloramarr or subscribe to his weekly newsletter on Substack here: https://taylormarr.substack.com

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