x
Your C.A.R.

Californians for Homeownership

Californians for Homeownership was founded in response to the California Legislature’s call for public interest organizations to fight local anti-housing policies on behalf of the millions of California residents who need access to more affordable housing. 


Champions of Home Impact Awards

The Champions of Home Impact Awards honor California REALTORS® who have made a significant impact on their communities through volunteer efforts. 


Housing Affordability Fund Program

HAF plays an active role in addressing the ongoing housing affordability challenges facing California.

Make A Donation to HAF
C.A.R. Disaster Relief

C.A.R. stands ready to assist REALTORS® who have been impacted by wildfires through its Disaster Relief Fund and NAR's REALTORS® Relief Foundation.

California Disaster Resources
Scholarship Foundation

Scholarships for California students planning to pursue a career in real estate.


Education Foundation

Grants for California REALTORS® and residents pursuing real estate education.


Diversity and Inclusion Programs

Find out more information on key diversity and inclusion programs and projects available.

Fair Housing Latino Professionals Network C.A.R. Women's Initiative
Young Professionals Network

New to the industry? YPN is a network to sharpen your skills, heighten your leadership, and connect with fellow REALTORS®.

Rising Star Award
Guide to Benefits

Download and share the official 2024 C.A.R. Member Benefits Guide.

NAR Member Discounts C.A.R. Insurance Products
For New Members

As a C.A.R. member you may have questions about your association and the industry. Find the answers here.

New Member FAQs Glossary Service Providers
Membership Dues and Value

C.A.R. provides tremendous member value through its innovative tools, services and education. Learn more about C.A.R. membership and dues and NAR membership and dues.


Consumer Ad Campaign

C.A.R.'s annual consumer advertising campaign creates awareness of the REALTOR® brand and demonstrates the many benefits of the consumer-REALTOR® relationship.


Smart Zone

Smart Zone provides tools and insights necessary to convey your unique value proposition, effectively market your services, keep your clients abreast of current real estate market trends and help you achieve success in a dynamic industry.


2025 C.A.R. Officers

Meet the 2025 C.A.R. Leadership Team


C.A.R. Mission Statement

C.A.R. is a statewide trade association dedicated to the advancement of professionalism in real estate.

Annual Report
C.A.R. Impact Report

The CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® is committed to bring you tools and information to help you succeed. Here are some of the innovative tools, services and education C.A.R. provided to help you achieve your professional goals.


Media Center

C.A.R.'s Media Center houses the Association's news releases, media guidelines, and logos.

News Releases
Careers

C.A.R. and its subsidiaries are currently recruiting for the following job opportunities.


Partner With Us

Partner With Us


Advertise With Us

Learn about advertising with C.A.R.


Customer Service

Looking for additional assistance? The Customer Contact Center is looking forward to serving you Monday through Friday between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:45 p.m.


Rosters & Directories

Need help finding the right person? Try searching through our various rosters & directories.


CLOSE

4th quarter 2021 housing affordability

What is This?
Add a quick link to this page from the Homepage when you are signed in
Share Article

For release:
February 10, 2022

 California housing affordability improves in fourth-quarter 2021 as prices level off and incomes grow, C.A.R. reports

  • Twenty-five percent of California households could afford to purchase the $797,470 median-priced home in the fourth quarter of 2021, up from 24 percent in third-quarter 2021 but down from 27 percent in fourth-quarter 2020.

  • A minimum annual income of $148,000 was needed to make monthly payments of $3,700, including principal, interest and taxes on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at a 3.28 percent interest rate.

  • Thirty-six percent of home buyers were able to purchase the $610,350 median-priced condo or townhome. A minimum annual income of $113,200 was required to make a monthly payment of $2,830.

     

  • Infographic: https://www.car.org/Global/Infographics/HAI-2021-Q4

 

LOS ANGELES (Feb. 10) – A tempering of home price growth combined with a solid increase in household incomes improved the affordability outlook for Californians in the fourth quarter of 2021, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) said today.

The percentage of home buyers who could afford to purchase a median-priced, existing single-family home in California in fourth-quarter 2021 inched up to 25 percent from 24 percent in the third quarter of 2021 but was down from 27 percent in the fourth quarter of 2020, according to C.A.R.’s Traditional Housing Affordability Index (HAI). The fourth-quarter 2021 figure is less than half of the affordability index peak of 56 percent in the first quarter of 2012. 

C.A.R.’s HAI measures the percentage of all households that can afford to purchase a median-priced, single-family home in California. C.A.R. also reports affordability indices for regions and select counties within the state. The index is considered the most fundamental measure of housing well-being for home buyers in the state.

A minimum annual income of $148,000 was needed to qualify for the purchase of a $797,470 statewide median-priced, existing single-family home in the fourth quarter of 2021. The monthly payment, including taxes and insurance on a 30-year, fixed-rate loan, would be $3,700, assuming a 20 percent down payment and an effective composite interest rate of 3.28 percent. The effective composite interest rate was 3.07 percent in third-quarter 2021 and 2.96 percent in fourth-quarter 2020. 

With the median price of condominiums and townhomes reaching another record high in fourth-quarter 2021, affordability for condos and townhomes dipped from the previous quarter. Thirty-six percent of California households earned the minimum income to qualify for the purchase of a $610,350 median-priced condo/townhome in the fourth quarter of 2021, which required an annual income of $113,200 to make monthly payments of $2,830. The fourth quarter 2021 figure was down from 41 percent a year ago.

Compared with California, half of the nation’s households could afford to purchase a $361,700 median-priced home, which required a minimum annual income of $67,200 to make monthly payments of $1,680. Nationwide affordability was down from 55 percent a year ago.

Key points from the fourth-quarter 2021 Housing Affordability report include:

  • Compared to the previous quarter, housing affordability in the fourth quarter of 2021 declined in 19 counties, improved in 19 counties and remained unchanged in 13 counties. Compared to the previous year, forty-one counties experienced a drop in housing affordability from a year ago, 6 counties increased year-over-year, and four counties remained flat from last year.

  • In the nine-county San Francisco Bay Area, affordability improved from the previous quarter in Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin and Napa and was unchanged in the remaining five counties. San Mateo County was the least affordable Bay Area county, at just 19 percent of households able to purchase the $2,100,000 median-priced home. Forty-two percent of Solano County households could afford the $585,000 median-priced home, making it the most affordable Bay Area county.

  •  In the Southern California region, Los Angeles was the only county whose affordability improved from the previous quarter. Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura counties recorded a decline in affordability from the previous quarter and San Diego was unchanged. At 17 percent, Orange County was the least affordable, and San Bernardino was the most affordable at 42 percent.

  • In the Central Valley region, Kings County was the most affordable at 54 percent, and San Benito was the least affordable at 27 percent.

  • In the Central Coast region, Santa Cruz County was the least affordable, and San Luis Obispo County was the most affordable at 22 percent.

  • For the state as a whole, Lassen (63 percent) was the most affordable county in in the fourth quarter of 2021, followed by Kings (54 percent), Merced (45 percent), Shasta (45 percent) and Tuolumne (45 percent). Lassen also required the lowest minimum qualifying income to purchase a median-priced home at $46,000.

  • Mono (13 percent), Orange (17 percent) and Santa Cruz (17 percent) were the least affordable counties in the state, with each requiring at least a minimum income of $158,000 to purchase a median-priced home in the county. San Mateo required the highest minimum qualifying income to buy a median-priced home in fourth-quarter 2021 at $390,000. The other two California counties with a minimum qualifying income exceeding $300,000 were San Francisco ($338,800) and Santa Clara ($311,200).

  • Housing affordability declined the most on a year-over-year basis in Yuba and Mariposa, dropping 13 and 11 points, respectively from the fourth quarter of 2020. The drop in affordability in Yuba was due partly to a surge in the county’s median price from a year ago but also was due to the decline in its median household income. For Mariposa, the decline in affordability was caused by a 25.3 percent year-over-year increase in its median home price.

See C.A.R.’s historical housing affordability data.

See first-time buyer housing affordability data.

Leading the way…® in California real estate for more than 110 years, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (www.car.org) is one of the largest state trade organizations in the United States with more than 200,000 members dedicated to the advancement of professionalism in real estate. C.A.R. is headquartered in Los Angeles.

 

# # #

 

CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®
Traditional Housing Affordability Index
Fourth quarter 2021

STATE/REGION/COUNTY

Qtr. 4

2021

Qtr. 3

2021

 

Qtr. 4

2020

Median Home Price

Monthly Payment Including Taxes & Insurance

Minimum Qualifying Income

Calif. Single-family home

25

24

 

27

 

$797,470

$3,700

$148,000

Calif. Condo/Townhome

36

37

 

41

 

$610,350

$2,830

$113,200

Los Angeles Metro Area

26

26

 

30

 

$722,000

$3,350

$134,000

Inland Empire

35

36

 

41

 

$530,000

$2,460

$98,400

San Francisco Bay Area

23

22

 

24

 

$1,250,000

$5,800

$232,000

United States

50

50

 

55

 

$361,700

$1,680

$67,200

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

San Francisco Bay Area

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Alameda

20

19

 

23

 

$1,265,000

$5,870

$234,800

Contra Costa

33

31

 

34

 

$870,000

$4,040

$161,600

Marin

23

22

 

22

 

$1,605,000

$7,450

$298,000

Napa

24

23

 

29

 

$885,000

$4,110

$164,400

San Francisco

21

21

 

20

 

$1,825,000

$8,470

$338,800

San Mateo

19

19

 

20

 

$2,100,000

$9,750

$390,000

Santa Clara

22

22

 

22

 

$1,675,000

$7,780

$311,200

Solano

42

42

 

45

 

$585,000

$2,720

$108,800

Sonoma

28

28

 

28

 

$774,500

$3,600

$144,000

Southern California

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Los Angeles

21

19

 

23

 

$797,890

$3,700

$148,000

Orange

17

18

 

22

 

$1,150,000

$5,340

$213,600

Riverside

32

33

 

39

 

$585,000

$2,720

$108,800

San Bernardino

42

43

 

48

 

$450,000

$2,090

$83,600

San Diego

23

23

 

26

 

$845,000

$3,920

$156,800

Ventura

24

25

 

27

 

$849,000

$3,940

$157,600

Central Coast

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monterey

19

20

 

18

 

$850,000

$3,950

$158,000

San Luis Obispo

22

24

 

25

 

$802,000

$3,720

$148,800

Santa Barbara

20

17

 

16

 

$919,000

$4,270

$170,800

Santa Cruz

17

17

 

19

 

$1,210,000

$5,620

$224,800

Central Valley

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fresno

40

42

 

48

 

$387,500

$1,800

$72,000

Glenn

43

44

 

47

 

$335,000

$1,560

$62,400

Kern

43

45

 

48

 

$340,000

$1,580

$63,200

Kings

54

56

 

57

 

$330,000

$1,530

$61,200

Madera

42

43

 

49

 

$390,000

$1,810

$72,400

Merced

45

44

 

45

 

$370,000

$1,720

$68,800

Placer

39

38

 

42

 

$650,000

$3,020

$120,800

Sacramento

39

39

 

43

 

$515,000

$2,390

$95,600

San Benito

27

27

 

31

 

$780,000

$3,620

$144,800

San Joaquin

38

37

 

42

 

$499,000

$2,320

$92,800

Stanislaus

40

41

 

46

 

$440,000

$2,040

$81,600

Tulare

44

46

 

49

 

$329,000

$1,530

$61,200

Far North

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Butte

35

35

 

35

 

$443,000

$2,060

$82,400

Lassen

63

68

 

67

 

$246,750

$1,150

$46,000

Plumas

39

38

 

45

 

$418,750

$1,940

$77,600

Shasta

45

44

 

49

 

$369,000

$1,710

$68,400

Siskiyou

44

41

 

48

 

$305,000

$1,420

$56,800

Tehama

40

38

 

45

 

$327,500

$1,520

$60,800

Other Calif. Counties

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Amador

43

42

 

50

 

$420,000

$1,950

$78,000

Calaveras

40

39

 

44

 

$460,000

$2,140

$85,600

Del Norte

39

35

 

36

 

$350,000

$1,630

$65,200

El Dorado

37

35

 

41

 

$630,000

$2,930

$117,200

Humboldt

30

32

 

38

 

$437,500

$2,030

$81,200

Lake

43

42

 

46

 

$341,200

$1,580

$63,200

Mariposa

30

35

 

41

 

$470,000

$2,180

$87,200

Mendocino

22

23

 

28

 

$551,000

$2,560

$102,400

Mono

13

13

 

11

 

$850,000

$3,950

$158,000

Nevada

37

35

 

40

 

$530,000

$2,460

$98,400

Sutter

41

42

 

46

 

$418,000

$1,940

$77,600

Tuolumne

45

45

 

50

 

$385,000

$1,790

$71,600

Yolo

33

33

 

38

 

$589,450

$2,740

$109,600

Yuba

36

38

 

49

 

$411,450

$1,910

$76,400

 


SUPPORT
Top Searches
;