Advertisement

Stretched too thin? You’ve got company

Share

This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.

OK, penny pinchers, it’s not just your imagination. It has gotten increasingly expensive to own a home in relation to income, and mortgage payments are only part of the picture.

A national study out today, ‘Stretched Thin: The Impact of Rising Housing Expenses on America’s Owners and Renters, 2008,’ looks at the costs of housing beyond home loans between 1996 and 2006. The Center for Housing Policy study found that all major types of homeowner-related expenses rose faster than incomes during that decade.

Advertisement

Among findings from the research affiliate of the Washington, D.C.-based National Housing Conference, mortgage payments rose 46%, utilities 43%, property taxes 66% and homeowners insurance 83%, while homeowner incomes increased only 36.3%. Renters didn’t fare much better. Rents rose 51% during the 10-year period studied, while renters’ incomes rose only 31.4%. More information on housing-related topics is available the National Housing Conference’s Open House Blog.

-- Lauren Beale

Your thoughts? Comments?

Advertisement