
So Money with Farnoosh Torabi 1933: The Housing Affordability Crisis, Explained. Who Can Still Buy a Home?
Jan 19, 2026
In this discussion, guest Alex Gailey, a personal finance reporter at Bankrate, dives into the housing affordability crisis plaguing America. She reveals that typical households are priced out of 75% of homes on the market. Alex highlights the impacts of low mortgage rates, rising housing costs, and stagnant wages. She offers insights on affordable regions and shares strategies for first-time buyers, including flexibility and creative co-buying solutions. Renting emerges as a viable wealth-building alternative to avoid becoming house-poor.
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Three Quarters Of Listings Are Unaffordable
- Bankrate analysis shows the typical U.S. household cannot afford 75% of homes on the market right now.
- This gap reflects nationwide supply constraints and regional price-income mismatches.
Underbuilding Created A Long-Term Shortage
- Chronic underbuilding since the Great Recession created today's tight supply.
- Zoning, higher construction costs and labor shortages mean it will take years to rebalance supply and demand.
Prices And Rates Delivered A One-Two Punch
- Home prices rose ~50% since 2020 while wages rose ~20%, creating a large affordability gap.
- Higher mortgage rates in 2022 amplified the mismatch between income and housing costs.
