From Zero hedge
Most Americans can’t afford a new home.
A new analysis from the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) shows that 65% of U.S. households are priced out of newly built homes, based on current prices and mortgage rates.
In some parts of the country, the situation is even more extreme. More than 80% of households can’t afford a new home, highlighting how widespread the affordability gap has become.
This map, via Visual Capitalist’s Dorosthy Neufeld, shows where Americans are being priced out and where barriers to homeownership are highest.

Ranked: Where Americans Are Most Priced Out of New Homes
At the extreme end, buying a new home is nearly out of reach. In New Hampshire, 83.4% of households are priced out of a new median-priced home.
In total, 11 states have at least 80% of households locked out.
This table shows the share of households priced out of new homes by state in 2026. A household is considered “priced out” if total housing costs—principal, interest, taxes, and insurance—exceed 28% of income, based on median new home prices and a 6% mortgage rate.
| State | % of Households Priced Out of New Homes | Median New Home Price | Income Needed to Qualify |
|---|---|---|---|
| New Hampshire | 83.4% | $677,982 | $211,080 |
| Hawaii | 83.0% | $884,781 | $234,818 |
| Maine | 82.7% | $548,493 | $160,714 |
| Alaska | 82.2% | $627,077 | $188,313 |
| Connecticut | 81.8% | $696,752 | $224,811 |
| Wyoming | 81.8% | $580,627 | $164,982 |
| Montana | 81.5% | $495,610 | $141,997 |
| Oregon | 81.0% | $608,135 | $173,717 |
| New York | 80.5% | $656,108 | $204,163 |
| Vermont | 80.1% | $580,627 | $181,064 |
| Pennsylvania | 80.0% | $528,370 | $160,900 |
| Massachusetts | 79.8% | $836,236 | $246,370 |
| Wisconsin | 77.3% | $485,449 | $149,085 |
| Ohio | 76.5% | $443,646 | $137,310 |
| Washington | 76.1% | $649,812 | $185,213 |
| Colorado | 75.1% | $644,149 | $179,928 |
| Kansas | 73.4% | $401,237 | $128,372 |
| Rhode Island | 72.9% | $578,724 | $174,451 |
| South Carolina | 72.5% | $421,098 | $118,180 |
| New Mexico | 71.7% | $362,847 | $104,055 |
| Illinois | 71.3% | $428,712 | $143,374 |
| Michigan | 71.3% | $371,503 | $122,158 |
| Kentucky | 71.3% | $398,741 | $109,299 |
| Florida | 71.1% | $429,644 | $127,139 |
| Indiana | 70.7% | $418,993 | $123,219 |
| District of Columbia | 70.1% | $836,441 | $232,260 |
| Iowa | 70.0% | $348,337 | $120,598 |
| Arkansas | 70.0% | $381,881 | $100,780 |
| Alabama | 69.2% | $375,944 | $106,586 |
| New Jersey | 69.1% | $527,069 | $172,356 |
| Utah | 68.2% | $531,151 | $145,638 |
| Tennessee | 67.7% | $399,580 | $111,631 |
| Oklahoma | 67.6% | $351,771 | $107,846 |
| Arizona | 66.6% | $446,796 | $122,364 |
| Missouri | 66.6% | $371,515 | $111,332 |
| Idaho | 66.4% | $430,280 | $117,615 |
| North Carolina | 66.4% | $394,058 | $112,263 |
| Louisiana | 66.2% | $318,728 | $95,895 |
| California | 65.6% | $545,892 | $153,471 |
| Nevada | 65.5% | $420,782 | $115,555 |
| West Virginia | 64.8% | $308,607 | $88,071 |
| Texas | 64.5% | $369,798 | $117,131 |
| Georgia | 62.5% | $374,579 | $109,329 |
| Minnesota | 62.1% | $402,209 | $122,025 |
| Nebraska | 62.0% | $328,603 | $107,185 |
| South Dakota | 62.0% | $346,894 | $106,233 |
| North Dakota | 61.4% | $382,451 | $116,480 |
| Mississippi | 61.1% | $266,837 | $80,174 |
| Virginia | 58.9% | $429,184 | $122,542 |
| Maryland | 58.5% | $432,949 | $127,559 |
| Delaware | 56.0% | $376,478 | $104,282 |
While high-cost states like Hawaii and Massachusetts rank among the least affordable, others such as Maine and Wyoming show that affordability pressures are no longer limited to major metro areas.
Affordability Isn’t Just a Coastal Problem
The most striking takeaway is how universal the problem has become.
Even in lower-cost states like Mississippi ($267K) and West Virginia ($309K), a majority of households are still priced out new homes. While buyers need under $90,000 in income—compared to over $200,000 in the least affordable markets—that threshold remains out of reach for many.
In other words, moving to a cheaper state is no longer a reliable solution. Instead, the data points to a deeper issue, which is that incomes have not kept pace with rising housing costs across the country.
While existing homes can be more affordable than new construction, this data highlights a key constraint: much of the new housing supply entering the market is already out of reach for most households.
The Bigger Picture
As new home prices continue to outpace income growth, the gap between who can and can’t afford newly built homes is widening. That shift is reshaping where Americans live, how they build wealth, and whether homeownership is attainable at all.
If even the most affordable states are out of reach for most households looking at new homes, the question becomes harder to ignore: where can buyers realistically go next?
Homes have been way too over valued for at least the last 4+ years,am on buyers strike.Flu nonsense and loose monetary policy are the reasons fo rthis.
I also do not want a new home unless I build it meself(licensed builder with other useless cert.s).
I am a cash buyer who needs a minimum of 20 acres,almost got a 300 acre property but the realtor screwed me and I know sold/dealt with a family member/friend as was a great deal.
I may never own another property as have been on the hunt for a few years and while still searching burning out on it to a point almost not worth it ,also rent a house for short money but not a lot of land and as not my property can’t do all I want.
I do feel bad for young folks trying to start out,hope this nonsense ends but feel won’t be soon.
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