Tampa Bay housing market nears boil-over

Tampa Bay housing market nears boil-over

Tampa Bay housing market nears boil-over

Driving the news: Florida has nine of the top 10 fastest-growing monthly mortgage payments, according to Zillow — with Tampa Bay dominating that list.

By the numbers: Tampa homebuyers are spending 35.5% of their household income on average on mortgage payments, according to a new Zillow analysis.

The big picture: Tampa Bay’s home values are about 36% above where they would need to be for mortgage affordability to return to its historic norm over the last 16 years, according to Zillow.
• Nationally, the home value rate is almost 25% above what it would need to be for affordability to return to those pre-2022 levels.
• Zillow says it is extremely unlikely home values will fall back to their historical affordability norms without a sharp inventory increase, which is not expected.

What they’re saying: With low inventory, dismal income growth and ever-rising mortgage rates, Zillow senior economist Nicole Bachaud said the next several years will be a major challenge for home buyers.

Buying an affordable home is getting closer to impossible in Florida, especially in Tampa Bay .

Driving the news: Florida has nine of the top 10 fastest-growing monthly mortgage payments , according to Zillow — with Tampa Bay dominating that list.Why it matters: Buyers are already being priced out of the market, and those holding out for prices to improve likely have a long wait ahead of them.By the numbers: Tampa homebuyers are spending 35.5% of their household income on average on mortgage payments , according to a new Zillow analysis. That’s well above the 22.7% homeowners spent in the area on average between 2005 and 2021.
• The national average is 30%, which is also the threshold at which buyers are considered “cost burdened” by housing costs, Zillow notes.The big picture: Tampa Bay ‘s home values are about 36% above where they would need to be for mortgage affordability to return to its historic norm over the last 16 years, according to Zillow .
• Nationally, the home value rate is almost 25% above what it would need to be for affordability to return to those pre-2022 levels.
Zillow says it is extremely unlikely home values will fall back to their historical affordability norms without a sharp inventory increase, which is not expected.What they’re saying: With low inventory, dismal income growth and ever-rising mortgage rates, Zillow senior economist Nicole Bachaud said the next several years will be a major challenge for home buyers .
• “There is plenty of pent-up demand ready to bid prices back up if they reach a level would-be buyers can once again afford,” Bachaud warned.What to watch: “The recent slowdown in single-family construction is not a good sign that the market is getting closer to building enough to meet demand,” Bachaud said.